October 2011
Jesus motherloving Christ. If Alan Joyce is making a late bid for Twat of the Year 2011, then he’s eating daylight on his competitors. On Saturday the Qantas CEO shut down worldwide operations of one of the planet’s biggest airlines, in an over-reaction that made King Lear look pretty chill.

Like one of those seasoned chooks you get all ready for roasting, some things come pre-satirised. On Friday, Joyce asked shareholders at Qantas’ annual general meeting to give him a pay rise of 71 per cent, from under $3 million a year to about $5 million. They did. The next day, he shut down their company entirely, because of the “extreme demands” of workers. First prize, Alan. Believe.
Where unions have to give 72 hours notice of any action, Joyce gave zero hours. He stranded 68,000 people worldwide, upended the plans of tens of thousands more, and lost an unquantifiable number of future bookings.
Update: In the very early hours of this morning Fair Work Australia terminated the chaotic industrial action between Qantas and the unions.Qantas says they expect flight to be grounded till 12noon today. With Alan Joyce telling the media flights may be back in the air by early afternoon today. Almost 70,000 passengers have been stranded in Australia and around the world.
“It’s good to fly Qantas,” said Tony Abbott, meaning to be heard, as yesterday afternoon he stepped from an aircraft at Canberra airport.

Actually the plane belonged to QantasLink, a related combine of three regional airlines, diverted from Mildura to pick up passengers in Melbourne.
But it was the closest any of us got to a Qantas service yesterday. And Tony Abbott is the closest that Qantas CEO Alan Joyce has to a friend in Australian public life at the moment.
Continue reading "More blood, sweat and tears before Qantas show is over" »
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Ex-Qantas employee says:
@TimB and @Ben C “More importantly in your example, if the CEO was apparently so unnecessary during those eight months, why did they bother appointing one at the end?” When Qantas was a Government enterprise, the CEO was paid $350k pa. When the airline was privatised, they waited 8 months… Read more »
There are countless stories about millionaires and their pampered thoroughbreds at this time of year. This is not one of them.

This is a story about a 74 year old bush harness racing trainer, an 84 year old owner and the slow, hopeless horse they wouldn’t send to the knackery, despite the fact it had raced 85 times without winning.
Continue reading "The slow hopeless horse who took 86 starts to bloom" »
Latest 2 of 32 comments
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Marie says:
Hmmm, Ice-cream from Badenoch’s Deli, it’s a Mount Gambier tradition…that and ‘hanging a mainy’ on a Thursday night!! Read more »
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Sim says:
Thanks for telling this story, Ant! Im a Gambier girl and know Tony and the Badenochs well. This story has had us all in hysterics! Hopefully it puts a smile on the face of everyone else who reads it! Read more »
Three more Australians are dead, and seven injured, in Afghanistan. It’s even more tragic because it appears the killer was an Afghan soldier, a colleague. Follow the news at news.com.au. Nathan Mullins spent time with the Australian Special Forces in Oruzgan, and this is his perspective on the many questions that beset Australia about our role in Afghanistan.
What are ‘we’ doing in Afghanistan? People ask me whether we can win the war. That’s not the important question. The question is whether we should be trying to ‘win’ in the first place. But before that the question is: who’s ‘we’? We the Coalition, we the Australian Army, we Australians, or indeed, we the western world? It’s a long way from Melbourne to Afghanistan, both geographically and figuratively, but when I had the chance to fight in the hills and valleys of Uruzgan with the Australian Special Forces, I did it. I needed to know if ‘we’ should be there.
When I decided to go I thought I represented the Australian Army. While I was there I realized that the people of Afghanistan feel isolated from the rest of the world. They didn’t see me as an Australian soldier, or an Australian really, they saw me as a citizen of a world that was so foreign to them as to barely exist.
Continue reading "We are doing the right thing in Afghanistan" »
Latest 2 of 106 comments
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Paul says:
@ Jarrah: lmfao, darwinism will sort you out, ha ha ha ha ha. Read more »
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Jarrah says:
Careful wolfie, someone might accuse you of being my alter ego… Read more »
Matt Granfield is a typical Gen Y guy with a social conscience. He joined his friends in protesting at the Occupy Sydney movement. His Uncle Barry was shocked to see him on the television. The Vietnam war veteran doesn’t understand what Matt’s generation could possibly have to complain about. While Matt thinks his Uncle, with his Medicare assisted health care and addiction to consumer goods, should question what he hears on the news every night. Below is a copy of their email exchange.

From: Barry Granfield Sent: Sunday, 30 October 2011 10:20 AM
To: Matt Granfield
Subject: Occupy Wall Street Protests
Dear Matthew, I saw you on the news last week. I have to say, I’m most disappointed. This Occupy Sydney thing is a farce. I know you’ll say it’s hypocritical of me, but back in the 70s we were fighting against The Vietnam War and a government who locked people in jail for refusing to be conscripted. We had a good reason. This is just silly. What on earth are you protesting against? And since when did you learn to play the bongos?
Uncle Barry
Continue reading "In my day, we had a whole war to protest about" »
Latest 2 of 99 comments
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marley says:
So, we have Australian protesters complaining about things that mostly affect the US, not Australia. Seems to me they’re pretty phobic, fearful and anxious. Maybe you should talk to them. Read more »
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Carol Joyce says:
USA is based on fears.phobias, anxieties and wars. Australia should not participate in USA irrational irrelevant fears, phobias,anxieties and wars Read more »
Here we go again – time to dig out the fascinator, grab a six-pack of Bacardi Breezers and wobble off on impractically high heels to Melbourne’s Spring Racing Carnival.

At any other time of the year, the races are likely to be associated with dodgy bookies, the barbarism of jumps racing and problem gambling. Around this time, however, we start referring to it as the “sport of kings”, an elite, glamorous cultural event.
But how glamorous is it really when, for every one expensively-preened Fashions on the Field entrant, there are five young men wearing that consistently hilarious combination of tux and Aussie flag boxers? You can bet that while Lillian Frank or Peter Jago praise the young ladies present for returning to the modest and elegant trends of the 1920s, most people won’t go home without seeing at least a dozen women clutching a pair of vomit-speckled stilettos.
Latest 2 of 106 comments
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Al says:
Melbourne women are mostly butt ugly, it’s a shame ths event isn’t held somewhere else. Read more »
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not a master says:
I’ve seen BDSM slaves whipped harder then any racing horse ever got.. and the slaves come back for more - so it can’t be that bad AND wild horses love to run - have you ever seen a documentary on them? they love it - in their own natural environment… Read more »
Welcome to Monday y’all. While most of Australia spent the weekend in a bad mood after missed flights, delayed holidays and spending two days in crappy interstate hotel rooms, there was a good news story. But you have to be a romantic at heart to appreciate it.

Victorian barrister David Moen asked the solicitor sitting next to him at the bar table during a criminal trial to marry him. Yep, during the trial. Here’s how he described it: “The environment was right, the feeling was right and I just spoke from the heart. It wasn’t a prepared speech, I was just speaking to someone I love. Luckily, the prosecutor didn’t object.”
Luckier still was the woman in question, solicitor Melanie Hrvatin replied immediately with: “Absolutely, Your Honour”. Doesn’t that bring a tear to your eye? If that’s not among the most unusual marriage proposals you’ve ever heard, we want to know what is. So share it here. Or bang on about how much Qantas stuffed up your weekend.
Oh, and happy Halloween, although that seems a strange greeting.
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Somewhere in California a student is having a laugh. His name is Alan Joyce and he holds the Twitter handle @Alanjoyce. A number of people, of whom I am one, wrongly added that name to tweets on the grounding of Qantas (If you’re so proud of taking the “hard decision” how about making one about your pay @alanjoyce ? #qantas).

Fellow tweeps pointed out the error and corrections were quickly posted. I even apologized to Mr @alanjoyce, somewhat pointlessly as the Stanford student understands full well that he does not run an airline any more than the former Hawthorn coach (Alan Joyce) does.
The reason my @alanjoyce tweet got a life of its own was that so many people apparently agreed with the sentiment and retweeted it. Some did not agree but retweeted it too.
Continue reading "Joyce’s wildcat move has mauled the Flying Kangaroo" »
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cheap oem software says:
WtYDWR Im obliged for the article. Will read on… Read more »
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D Kef. says:
I have managed to save out of my pensions for an annual overseas trip most years. Used to be Qantas. Now any airline but. Until AJ is gone. Read more »
You really have to wonder how spectacularly insecure or under-endowed a bloke must be if he chooses to demonstrate his masculinity by shooting a majestic animal such as a giraffe or a hippo.

Yet these are the very people which the self-styled hard man from North Queensland, Bob “No Poofters” Katter, has surrounded himself with as he builds a support base for his fledgling Australia Party.
It is tempting to write Katter off as a harmless nut or an amusing novelty on the political landscape who will never exert any influence over policy. The polls suggest however that his party may poll strongly in his home state at a federal election.
Continue reading "Hard men? My latte is harder than Bob Katter" »
Latest 2 of 141 comments
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Weinstien says:
Stop being such a protectionist. We import because it is cheap and relieves the price hikes which working Australia lived under when hacks like Katter, Menzies and Chifley ‘ran’ the economy. Protectionists think they are standing up for the little guy but in reality they are drive up the cost… Read more »
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north face outlet says:
Manners are quite different from country to country.Being criticized is awful!Let’s watch TV with a candle on.Thanks for taking me the movieI owe you for my dinner.No matter what happened, he would not say a word.No matter what happened, he would not say a word.They’re in red and white.Just wait… Read more »
I don’t have any huge vested interest, but I do enjoy a $20 flutter with Mum every couple of months. So what is all this fuss about pokies reform?

Will punters like me be affected? Will proposed changes really help the nation’s 95,000 pokie-playing problem gamblers (and a million other Aussies affected by the ripple)? And will the deal struck between the Gillard Government and Independent Andrew Wilkie decimate our pubs and clubs – indeed our way of life?
Number 1: The changes will have ZERO impact on the average recreational player. Most of us (88 per cent) spend less than $1 per button push. The mandatory pre-commitment cards proposed as part of these new reforms relate only to “high-intensity” betting of more than $1 per spin.
Continue reading "My name is Lainie and I enjoy the pokies" »
Latest 2 of 44 comments
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Andrew says:
It is about balance: we don’t want a nanny state, but nor do we want a state where no one gives a s**t about anyone else. The pokie purveyors are much closer to the latter than the former, like tobacco companies. Read more »
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Paul M says:
its because chicks (even 80-yo ones) simply don’t understand math. Read more »
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