May 2010
Kevin Rudd’s got a lot of explaining to do over his decision to spend $38 million whacking the mining industry over the head. Question Time is on again today. Join us here from 2pm for live coverage.
As election speculation hits a crescendo The Punch today launches its campaign countdown daily blog where we bring you the latest in a punchy, link-laden format, with today’s bolter being Simon Benson’s new book revealing that Kevin Rudd - and they’re his words - conspired with former NSW Premier Morris Iemma to “f..k” the unions over power privatisation.

Swearing at airline hosties might be unforgiveable but swearing at unionists is in the same category as swearing at newspaper editors - it’s a victimless crime. But the more telling take-out from Benson’s book is that Rudd is (again) painted as a chronic non-deliverer, in that he promised to back Iemma on the controversial power sale in 2007 and then squibbed it because federal Labor was guaranteed victory in the polls and he didn’t want a distracting controversy. The betrayal killed Iemma’s premiership.
Benson reveals that, prior to Rudd’s cave-in, the then federal Opposition Leader told Iemma :“If you help me, I’ll get elected and you will prosper. Work with me and, when the time comes, we can f ... them [the unions] together.” The meeting was attended by two other senior Labor staffers. Benson’s book is called Betrayal: The Underbelly of Australian Labor, and you can read an excerpt here. The quote about Rudd by the former NSW Treasurer, maverick Michael Costa, is a pearler.
Continue reading "Campaign countdown: who wanted to f**k the unions?" »
Latest 2 of 92 comments
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Darryl Price says:
Ha ha. “Other compelling reasons”. Right up there with ” ‘Cause” as in ” ‘Cause I said so”. Read more »
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Ellis says:
Would someone - anyone - please inform Krudd that you cannot Legislate the poor into prosperity by legislating the wealthy out of prosperity. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first… Read more »
One night in an impromptu makeshift dance party in Mosul, in Iraq, I met a young girl of age 20 who I started to talk to about Iraqi politics. We spoke in English - her fractured English was a lot better than my fractured Arabic – and discussed topics as broad as the disconnect between the political class and the people, to the Bollywood blockbuster Slumdog Millionaire.

I fondly remember that conversation, for one simple reason - Lubna was wearing the niqab, or, what most Australians would refer to (incorrectly) as the burqa. She wasn’t what I had envisaged a typical niqab wearing woman to be like.
She was partying and dancing next to both males and females who were drinking alcohol and rocking out to Katy Perry. She was progressive, easy going and open-minded.
Continue reading "Talking about Green Day with a cool chick in a niqab" »
Latest 2 of 146 comments
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JH says:
xyz, my wearing the niqab was not a knee-jerk reaction to this blog. Where do you get that from? Oh yes, that’s right, you think you know better what I’m saying/feeling because I’m oppressed, illiterate and men dictate what I am and do. I actually didn’t start wearing the niqab… Read more »
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Dana says:
Dancing to Katy Perry is anything but progressive and liberating. Are you kidding me? Dancing to soulless, mainstream studio anti-music? I’d rather dance to Disney music. It is, in fact, Disney music. Please. Read more »
Why is it that when a health care professional informs a morbidly obese man that he should lose some weight, that mans first reaction is to cry ‘discrimination’?

Where is the prejudice in this situation? As a society we are practically drowning in information about the inextricable link between being overweight and being unhealthy. If you think three square meals a day can be purchased through a drive-thru window, and that exercise is getting up to change the channel when you’ve lost the remote, then that should remove your right to feel offended when you’re handed an ample helping of the truth.
If someone who has spent the better part of a decade at medical school learning how to piece you back together if you break, tells you to drop a few kgs, they’re doing it for your own good.
Continue reading "Overweight people should just get over the criticism" »
Latest 2 of 160 comments
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The death of 24 year old Matthew McEvoy outside a night club in Melbourne in 2008 was as a result of acts of senseless violence by two young men, Andriyas Tello and Lauren Sako.

But as tragic as Matthew McEvoy’s death is, it is important to remember that the justice system in a democratic society is not there as a tool of revenge or bloodlust, but exists rather as a means of both protecting society and hoping that these young men do not offend in this serious way again.
David Penberthy on this site last Thursday took issue with Victorian Supreme Court Justice Paul Coghlan’s sentencing of Tello, who pleaded guilty to manslaughter, to a period of 5 years imprisonment (Sako has already been sent to jail for 6 years with a 3 year minimum term).
Continue reading "Five years in jail is a hell of a time, and a fitting sentence" »
Latest 2 of 55 comments
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Michael says:
Why does the statement that a 5 year jail term for anyone is a long time have to equate to saying that being indisposed for eternity “ain’t”? I don’t see how one has to mean the other. They are two seperate consequences. The author wasn’t comparing the two outcomes. Obviously… Read more »
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Gavin says:
Hey yeah, and while we’re at it let’s sacrafice every firstborn to appease the Aztec gods, as a means to avoid natural disasters. Who says we’re an evolved civil society. If we were to allow the death penalty, and you Pete were condemned while innocent, would the delicious irony come… Read more »
With the excellence that is Eurovision upon us again, here’s a flashback piece from shortly after our Punch launch last year…

What is there not to love about Eurovision? This year we had breakdancing Albanian midgets cavorting with a man in a sequinned aquamarine bodysuit and the winner was a fiddle-wielding Norwegian boy-singer. Plus, the Warsaw Pact still seems to be in force but nobody cares.
What is there not to love about it? Oh yeah, the music.
Continue reading "Flashback: Why Australia needs its own Eurovision" »
Latest 2 of 23 comments
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ILOVEWA says:
I think Australia should have a Eurovision. Gotta leave the west outta it though. 2 hours behind, pffft, wot a bunch of morons Read more »
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hos funny says:
hos’ hahahahahahaha Read more »
It’s been a turbulent year for the AFL, as it grapples with some of the hottest issues in the public eye. Sex scandals, the homosexuality debate, players caught out with illicit drugs – and major upsets each week on the field.

Match attendances are healthy, newspapers are overloaded with dramatic revelations of off-field disasters and the injury rate has meant some of the younger players are being rested for fear of breakdown.
Let’s talk about sex first. Now that I have your attention, the St Kilda-pregnant teen incident has highlighted the dangers for star footballers, young fans, and the potential disruption to all of their lives.
Continue reading "AFL grapples with sex and drugs and rock and roll" »
Latest 2 of 26 comments
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Dan says:
I think that if one told one’s family that one got a 16 year old pregnant, the bigger concern would be that one got a girl pregnant, whom one barely knows. Regardless this had nothing to do with morality. One can be uncomfortable with something (telling your family and friends… Read more »
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Brendan says:
I think the question we all need to ask is how comfortable would we feel telling our family and friends we got a 16 year old pregnant? The answer tells you if it’s morally right or wrong! Aren’t afl players the most god like role models in Australia’s sporting landscape? Read more »
John Lloyd, the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner, is paid $400,000 a year. Could a public servant ever be worth that much?

Yes, when he and his role is worth a lot more than that to the Australian economy in billions of dollars of productivity gains. And yes, when the remuneration represents danger money as the Commissioner and his staff for which is responsible, have been and continue to be subject to intimidation and coercion by Eureka cross wearing thugs across worksites nationwide.
John Lloyd, a very charming but tough man, is even more remarkable as a public servant as he could have opted to keep a long term cushy IR Club job as a commissioner for many years.
Continue reading "Sad exit of the man who took on building industry yobbos" »
Latest 2 of 17 comments
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Glenn says:
Not really. The AWU or NUW represent what the Libs want in a union; yellow bourgeois unions that don’t strike but kiss bosses arses. But I agree the CFMEU, while better then those more yellow unions, is too yellow and not nearly militant enough to be effective in the defending… Read more »
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TC says:
My 16 year old brother was beaten to a pulp for not wanting to be a union member. Both cheek bones broken from being picked up by several men who were running his head along a fence amongst other things. I really dont understand why people dont like the unions Read more »
IT looks like the Federal Government has dug itself into a hole over the resources super profits tax. The more it tries to justify the proposed tax the more costly it is proving electorally and the harder it will be to dredge a way out of the minefield it has created.

Framing a Budget forecast back in the black based on syphoning the rich profits of the big miners to fill a deep deficit must have seemed like a good idea at the time.
However, the Rudd Government underestimated the protests from the powerful resources lobby. The Prime Minister says the Government’s latest $38.5 million advertising campaign on the RSPT will counter a “scare campaign funded by some very, very big vested interests”.
Latest 2 of 73 comments
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Rob r Charteris says:
John says:11:13am; Last time i looked the oil and gas industry are still going strong. And the great GDP figures out today say the BER was a magic spoon in the mouths of australia, so what are you trying to get. Even the report coming back on the insulation prgram… Read more »
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Bea Minor says:
I agree. Rudd faces extremely negative press that does not seek the positives in any policy. Whilst it is the role of the media to play devil’s advocate, there is limited emphasis on the rationale Labor lays claim to for the mining tax . I am not a Labor voter… Read more »
Welcome to another glorious instalment of Suburban Tales – now moved to the business end of the news week. Finally, snippets of council curiosities and men doing strange things in sheds can rub shoulders with news of political intrigue and social schism.

We leave it to you, dear reader, to decide which is more ridiculous.
The rolling ballad of spin cycle Kimba: The internet is awash with tales of the age-old battle between pet and household appliance. Cat v microwave, dog v ride-on mover, hamster v sandwich, the list goes on.
Continue reading "Suburban tales: cat versus washing machine" »
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