28 February 2020

Coalition in contempt of the High Court?


The shenanigans of a colony gone feral.


From the article on 12 Feb 2020 by theguardian.com of the headline:

Coalition seeks to sidestep high court ruling that Aboriginal non-citizens can't be deported

Attorney general Christian Porter says government may be able to legislate a new way to deport those who have committed crimes

 


Attorney general Christian Porter said the high court’s decision that Aboriginal Australians are not ‘aliens’ has ‘very significant, immediate ramifications for what might not be a very large group of people’. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian


The Morrison government is looking to sidestep the high court’s decision that Aboriginal non-citizens cannot be deported using the aliens power by using other powers instead, the attorney general has said.

Responding to the high court’s landmark decision on Tuesday, Christian Porter said he found “great strength of reasoning” in chief justice Susan Kiefel’s minority judgment and the government may be able to legislate to deport the “not very large” group of Aboriginal non-citizens who have committed crimes in another way.

In a four-to-three decision, the high court held that Aboriginal people with sufficient connection to traditional societies cannot be aliens and therefore are beyond the reach of existing deportation laws which depend on the aliens power in section 51 (xix) of the constitution.

Porter told 6PR Radio on Wednesday the decision has “very significant, immediate ramifications for what might not be a very large group of people”.

Porter noted this group – “people who are born overseas, who aren’t Australian citizens, but may be able to show indigeneity and who are in Australia on a visa and commit an offence” would now “have to be treated differently from all other persons in the same circumstances” because they cannot be deported under existing law.

“So, it has a clear impact for that group of people and that policy of deporting people who’ve committed serious offences while on a visa and who are non-citizens,” he said.

“And we’ll be looking into ways in which we might be able to effect that policy, without reliance on the power that we previously were relying on, but we’ll look at that.”

Porter tacitly endorsed Kiefel’s view, saying her “minority reasoning was what I would have expected” but conceded the majority view would have implications for the federal government’s “program of pretty vigorous deportation of people that we consider represent a threat to the Australian community and Australian citizens”.

In his minority judgment, justice Stephen Gageler laid out a blueprint for how parliament could address the “complications and uncertainties” created for the maintenance of an “orderly immigration program” by reinstating its powers to deport Aboriginal non-citizens.

He said these could be addressed “by the commonwealth parliament reverting to the approach of relying on the power conferred by [section] 51(xxvii) to make laws with respect to ‘immigration and emigration’”.

“Alternatively, the commonwealth parliament might consider itself obliged to address them through racially targeted legislation enacted under s 51(xxvi) of the constitution [the race power].”

Gageler said on the “correct understanding” of the aliens power “neither is a course which the commonwealth parliament ought to be driven to take”.

Porter also acknowledged the judgment “may have broader implications”.

“It creates an entirely new category of people in terms of what the government can and can’t do,” he said, in reference to the new category of “belonger” – a non-citizen non-alien, recognised by the majority.

“Whether or not the principle has application in areas where the commonwealth relies on other heads of power, I think, is far less clear.”

Porter argued it was “not always an easy test” to determine if a person is Indigenous, citing the fact the court now requires a further hearing to determine if the second plaintiff, Daniel Love, is accepted as Aboriginal Australian by the the Kamilaroi tribe.

Although the decision has already provoked a furious response from conservative commentators who argue it introduces a new race-based distinction in the constitution, legal experts including Sydney University constitutional law professor, Anne Twomey, have warned it was too soon to know what the possible ramifications for the case might be beyond immigration law.

Wamba Wamba lawyer Eddie Synot, manager of the Indigenous Law Centre at the University of New South Wales, said the judgment concerned a “very narrow application of the aliens power” and explicitly stated it was not a recognition of Aboriginal sovereignty.

“More than anything for me, today just confirmed that the high court is never really going to be an environment where we’re ever going to be able to settle those original questions about sovereignty and the founding of the nations,” Synot said. “It’s going to have to be a political decision outside of the court.”

Synot said the decision had caused some angst among Aboriginal people concerned that a court was yet again appearing to decide on Aboriginal identity and belonging to country. Those concerns have been heightened in recent weeks by a request, swiftly denied, for police to investigate the Aboriginality of author Bruce Pascoe.

Dunce of Sussex




Briefly,

You were born into an ‘institution’, and were you not taught its law?

When you grew up and got married you concocted a plan to flee this institution with a one foot in and one foot out approach, but that was never going to work for you even though you did not comprehend the law you’re bound to.

You then tried to commercialised on your ‘royal’ status by branding ‘Sussex Royal’ (lol).

The sovereign had to step in and remind you of the law that you're bound to in the first place.

The removal of the brand name you tried to capitalise on makes you a laughing stock, but what’s more laughable is that people pay to hear you waffle on.

Even in the colony called Australia one cannot profit from the ‘crown’, which is what your intention was.

Your privileged and parasitic lifestyle demands that [for example] Canadian taxpayers must pay for your security as you are allegedly an IPP (Internationally Protected Person), whatever that really means.


In your case maybe it should stand for Internationally Prancing Punce?

Irrespective of whatever commercial success you may or may not have in the future, you’re still a dunce, a common trait of inbreeding (even though they tried to thin it out with the introduction of your mother) within the institution you came from.

So how did that work out for your wanna be ‘princess’?

25 February 2020

Phone manufacturers false advertising on 'new' tech?

Is the smartphone industry realistically a lacklustre game of which company can add the smallest ‘feature’ which may have been disabled from a few years back, turned on in a new package in order to extrude a few hundred bucks from the unsuspecting consumer?

Or is it a bit more deceptive where in some regions consumer law should be woken up to pull these corporations in for false advertising?

Even though Samsung currently is one of the world’s largest smartphone manufacturers is it really the ‘best’ or even a company the consumer can trust?

Let’s take a quick simple analogy with regards to Australia’s automotive industry, and the Aussie iconic brand of Holden, which is now in the stage of being buried 6ft under.

Just because it was the most popular vehicle on Australian roads does not make it the best vehicle on the road.

With smartphones manufacturers are not so much innovating with technology into their devices but rather with terminology to lure consumers to purchase their high end products are more expensive yielding greater profits for the corporations.

With the release of Samsung’s new Galaxy S20 Ultra comes the focus on its 100x (zoom) photography, which is ‘advertised’ in a nice large font.



When camera or rather lens zoom capability is mentioned, the number that is referred to is the optical capability of the lens, period.

Samsung have made up a term called ‘space zoom’ where at this level of ‘100x’ the subject is realistically unusable in real life tests.


In today’s world apparently the next best newest portable communications device to have is determined by its photographic quality rather than its communication capabilities.



Samsung is not that honest when it comes to its new foldable phone the Galaxy Z Flip either, where it’s not a glass foldable phone but rather a plastic screen with some glass like substance in between.

With the emergence of many new smartphone players over the last few years,  which Australian consumers may have not heard of or even see over the shores of this colony, it’s very competitive out there especially in the large Chinese and Indian mid range consumer market, where desperate times call for desperate measures, like ‘false’ (?) advertising for some companies.

Just because this month’s new phone model has a wacky named tinge of bluish green aqua mauve matt finish compared to the glossy back of the previous model, does the really necessitate you to spend the overinflated price asked for it?

Too many models with no (real) innovation to offer.

As an example Huawei, despite the US ‘ban’ in 2019 announced 32 new smartphones (excluding tablets & watches) to the world, where that's an average of over two and a half phones per month.

Imagine if China was a ‘capitalistic’ rĂ©gime, lol.

See also:




21 February 2020

Paedophiles in Hollywood mentioned by Spielberg’s daughter?



What people in the entertainment industry ‘get away’ with, mere mortals can only ‘dream’ about, if that particular activity is your vice.

Authorities overlook drug use in parties and gala events, where conversely when the serfs attend a music festival they release the hounds on them literally well in Australia at least.

Sexual abuse is rife in the Hollywood and broadly in the entertainment industry as a whole.

MANY persons are silent as their career and livelihood depends on their silence.

Paedophilia is also the industry’s a closely guarded secret, where its victim this time is Steven Spielberg’s adopted daughter Mikaela Spielberg.

The article in the Rupert Murdoch news.com.au online publication’s main focus is on her sexuality and her chosen career path as a sex worker.



Apparently her sexual abuse was not from “family or circle of friends”.

So then who was it from?

No investigation?

Sweep this one under the (red) carpet?

11 February 2020

Tracking tech blocked in Germany, your call Australia


In this day and age of internet connected appliances, so called privacy has been thrown out the window, where many of these devices haemorrhage your private, personal or confidential information. 

In the colony we call Australia, governments (state and federal) are very slow to enact law to protect their tax slave population in this digital world, where conversely they expedite law that punishes or generates revenue from fines and alike.

A new wave of data collection devices have hit the shores of this colony called wearables in this case smart watches and fitness bands, where they bleed data all over the place and one does not have to be tech savvy to mop it up.

Germany has recognised the threat this poses to its children, where as a result their sale has an outright ban.


Not so in this colony.

When a court orders the release of a child into the hands of a paedophile, or a paedophile is released into the community next to a primary school, what hope do the children (of corporate fodder) have of the law of ‘protecting’ them against online predators?

The actions and policies of the colonialists in office on this land are deliberately ‘behind the eight ball’ on a global scale, much to the detriment of the inhabitants.

Read more details:
 

10 February 2020

Australia's totalitarian corporatocracy in action

Coles, Woolworths and Aldi back wider use of welfare cash controls


Supermarket giants, banks and fintechs are backing changes that pave the way for a much wider roll out of the federal government's cashless debit card.

Coles, Woolworths and Aldi co-operated on a report recommending measures to make the card more accessible for both welfare and non-welfare recipients.

The report is sitting with the government as it seeks crossbench and Labor support to extend the card trial, which to date has been limited to welfare recipients in two regional areas with big Aboriginal populations.

Co-authored by the supermarkets, PayPal, EFTPOS, the Commonwealth Bank, Indue, Andrew Forrest's Minderoo Foundation and others, it urges the government to adopt the latest technology to improve the card and increase its effectiveness in reducing gambling and alcohol and drug abuse.
The recommendations include creating a simple opt-in mechanism for non-welfare recipients and creating a central white-label platform so multiple financial institutions can distribute the card.


Andrew Forrest's Minderoo Foundation supports wider use of the cashless debit card.  Fairfax Media
Another key change would see supermarkets apply technology to vet restricted purchases such as alcohol and gift cards at the point of sale.

The report said circumvention issues needed to be resolved before the card program could be extended to a larger number of communities.

Reducing gambling and substance abuse

Independent analysis shows the card has had some success in reducing gambling and substance abuse in Ceduna in South Australia and the East Kimberley in Western Australia where about 80 per cent of card users are Indigenous.

In the next two sites earmarked for the trial – the Goldfields in WA and the Bundaberg-Hervey Bay region in Queensland – most of card recipients will be non-Indigenous.

A Department of Social Security spokesman said it was anticipated that 86 per cent of those issued with a card in Bundaberg-Hervey Bay would be non-Indigenous, as would about 56 per cent in the Goldfields.

It is understood the report grew out of a conversation between Commonwealth Bank boss Ian Narev and Mr Forrest, who provided the catalyst for the card trial. They saw potential for co-operation between financial institutions, fintechs and retailers to improve the card.

Ubiquitous product offering

Minderoo Foundation special adviser Bruce Mansfield said that as the card was rolled out to more sites it was important to have a ubiquitous product offering available from all financial institutions.

"The government of course would like to make it easier for anyone who wishes to use the cashless debit card, or is required to use it under whatever welfare arrangement is put in place," he said.

"We think it is important they can go to multiple financial institutions, or the bank or building society they already use."

Other recommendations target improvements in data recording and analytics that would allow the government to track spending patterns.

Mr Mansfield, a former senior executive with Visa and EFTPOS, said the report had received a warm response from the government.

"The type of technology that we support implementing is exactly the same as what the vast majority of Australians have embraced over the past five to 10 years, contactless technology, contact chip technology, mobile technology," he said.

"The only thing different about the cashless debit card is the limiting and prohibition of certain products."

Source: https://www.afr.com/companies/coles-woolworths-and-aldi-back-wider-use-of-welfare-cash-controls-20180121-h0lo70?fbclid=IwAR3br6UiE5ebi2MB1kTwRZx9JqDd0ZXhs9032gQyXpn0s59SgbJADOgVqxs