Nick's Whispers from the mean streets appear in the monthly Sydney City Hub

The onward march of petrol poverty

12 May 2008
On the wall there were two laminated maps of Sydney, compiled by UTS researcher Peter Rickwood. The first showed a vast outer ring of suburbs coloured orange, where , at $1.50 a litre, the average household was shelling out more than 6 per cent of their income on petrol. This zone was labelled “Petrol Poverty Belt” in a bold hand, with a thick black marker. Scary, I thought, the $1.50 line passed a few days ago and petrol’s now heading for $1.60.

Light rail to Dulwich Hill
Simple, cheap, efficient, so Iemma's probably against it

8 May 2008
“Look, there’s one way of getting a lot more public transport capacity, at least in the inner west, and that’s by extending the Metro Light Rail from where it terminates at Lilyfield all the way to Dulwich Hill. It’d be as cheap as chips.” He peered triumphantly through his scratched old bifocals. I knew he was warming to one of his favourite topics.

The man in the glass bowl
John Howard should be tried for war crimes

10 March 08
I thought of Kissinger’s shrinking horizons when I heard John Winston Howard had turned up in Washington where he’d received the 2008 Irving Kristol award from the neoconservative American Enterprise Institute.
Not a single member of the Bush administration came along to hear Howard defend his decision to stand by Dubya in the invasion of Iraq. He ran Australia for 11 years on behalf of the neocons and all he got was a glass salad bowl

Can Mick Costa pull off the big one?
Privatisation as penis art
13 February 2008
It was mid afternoon when Joadja and I got back to the Brushtail Cafe after the rally and march against the Iemma Government’s crazy-mad plan to duplicate the Iron Cove Bridge and squeeze extra lanes into Victoria Road through Drummoyne.
EcoTransit’s Gavin Gatenby spoke at the rally, pointing out that the world reached the maximum possible level of oil production in late 2006. Production is already falling, he said, and petrol will probably hit $2 a litre within twelve months, but this loony government have their hearts set on a vast underground road system linking the Eastern Distributor with the M4 and Port Botany, complete with subterranean interchange

After 75 years, justice for Marinus
14 January 2008
In 1967 a West German court reduced Marinus van de Lubbe’s 1933 sentence for arson and treason to a prison term of eight years. In 1980 the same court lifted the sentence entirely, but the German federal court reversed this decision. The next year another court overturned the original conviction on the grounds that van der Lubbe was insane.
None of which mattered much to Marinus van der Lubbe himself because he was, in fact, very dead, having been guillotined in 1934. They do things differently in Germany.

Shooting the village explainers
13 December 2007
“You know when I was sure Howard was going to lose? It was when Sheehan slipped away from Fort Howard at the end of October. I always knew that Miranda Devine and Gerard Henderson, dog-loyal Howard soldiers, would fall at their posts, but not Sheehan – he snuffed defeat, slipped over the wall and vanished into the scrub in search of a new leader. Now he’s back in the Sydney Morning Herald putting down Bob Brown and the Greens and sucking up to the new government.”

Don’t mention the oil
Howard and Rudd avoid the burning issue of our time

10 November 2007
Oil has bumped $US100 a barrel. Right. That’s $US40 more than it was at the beginning of the year. Supplies of crude are getting tighter and tighter and competition for them more intense. If the situation from Pakistan to Palestine continues to deteriorate it’ll quickly go to $120 a barrel. If Bush tries to bomb Iran back to the Stone Age it could go anywhere.
Pretty soon, petrol will cost as much in Sydney as it did in the middle of the Nullabor a couple of years ago, but you won’t hear much debate about that grim fact from Liberal or Labor.

Letting slip the drugs of war
Is the CIA helping itself to the Afghan heroin harvest?

22 October 2007
Since the fall of the Taliban regime, which had seriously honoured an agreement to close down the trade, heroin production in Afghanistan has surged. In 2006 there was a 50 per cent increase in the poppy harvest and it created a new record for world production, my contact in the UN Office on Drugs and Crime told me. Afghanistan now accounts for 92 per cent of the world’s illicit production. She expected it would take another leap upwards this year.
So where is the stuff ending up? So far, not in Australia, but that’s only a matter of time. Once again, the streets of Western Europe and Russia are awash with the stuff and that fact got me thinking about the CIA.

Heroic Howard stabbed in the back
A new myth is born

1 October 2007
“Yeah, he’s in trouble all right”, Old Possum remarked, taking another sip from his cider. “But just when it’s needed, a new social myth is being born. You see, if all goes wrong, it’s important that Howard is preserved in the conservative pantheon as a hero who never lost a battle … except when he was betrayed by people on his own side.”

Next assignment: the invasion of Indonesia
Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition
23 August 2007
Don’t imagine for a second that the election of a Democrat to the US presidency would signal a less bellicose America – advisers to presidential candidates Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton say the difference would just be a matter of “style” and they’re spinning the need for more Australian “engagement” in American adventures abroad.
The Haneef case
How the lie got halfway round the world before the truth got its boots on

23 July 2007
In its general outline, the “official story” has held sway among our politicians and the mainstream media for several years now: we’re engaged in an open-ended struggle called “The Clash of Civilizations”: Muslims (monolithic, evil, fanatical, backward, growing relentlessly in numbers and influence) versus normal Western folk (nice, democratic, overly-trusting). A shadowy Muslim organization called al-Qaeda spreads its organizational tentacles throughout the world, ordering bombings . A contradictory alternative scenario, peddled by the same official sources, holds that it doesn’t. According to this even more scary theory, a controlling organization isn’t necessary because anytime any two or three Muslims get together they spontaneously form a cell devoted to jihad. Whatever, none of this has anything to do with oil.
Broad acceptance of this narrative leads the mainstream media to pass on, as good coin, whatever their “anonymous sources” in the secret police tell them.

The victory of spin
It all depends on how you frame the thing

22 June 2007
The efficacy of the Muslim terrorist scare campaign has worn off since the last election so the Great Illusionist needed a fresh new issue to appeal to the redneck prejudices of the idiot ‘aspirationals’ he depends on in the critical marginal seats – the people now doing it tough under Work Choices and interest rate rises. Taking the big stick of ‘tough love’ and martial law to the blacks has obvious appeal here. Howard can be seen to be taking a strong stand about a festering problem; he can bamboozle the black leaders by saying they’ve asked him to do something for years and now he’s doing it; and he can lay blame at the doorstep of the Labor state governments.

The Great Illusionist
30 May 2007
Howard conned his erstwhile supporters, got into power, and then with a flash and a bang, he pulled a hapless Arab Muslim out of his hat and screamed triumphantly: “I’ve gottim, I’ve gottim”. The silly buggers loved it. They never noticed the deft switch. The East Asian migrants kept coming, and a tiny harmless minority, something like 1.5 per cent of the population, became the focus of redneck fear and ignorance.

19 April 2007
The point is that technology changes things: before the rapid-fire firearm, it really was hard for a lone nut to massacre lots of people; with modern firepower, it’s quick and easy. In the 18 years before the reform of Australia’s gun laws in the wake of the April 1996 Port Arthur Massacre (35 dead, 19 wounded) there were 112 Australians killed and 52 wounded in 13 mass shooting incidents. There have been no mass shootings in the decade since semi-automatic rifles and shotguns were effectively illegalised and that is what the reforms were designed to achieve.

Occupation turf war sheds new light on the Nick Berg case

US contractors ‘tortured’ for talking to the FBI

11 April 2007
The case of Donald Vance, an American citizen secretly imprisoned by the US military in Iraq after making accusations against an Iraqi-owned security company for which he worked, has revealing parallels with the 2004 disappearance of Nick Berg, a US contractor whose murder is officially attributed to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

From under the linoleum
Old newspapers show Mussolini's imperialism looked a lot like today's

27 March 2007
I sat on the floor and picked through the tragedy of the country we now call Ethiopia laid out on the yellowing pages. It was eerily reminiscent of the current Iraq adventure.
Despite being massively outgunned by the Italians, the Abyssinians fought heroically. Spears and old rifles were pitted against tanks, artillery and modern bombers dropping poison gas and high explosives. Civilians were massacred and villages laid waste.
Around the world, the public were outraged, but the anger bothered Mussolini not at all.

Petrol at $1.20 a litre? Say goodbye to all that
27 February 2007
It was raining when I drove through Newtown late on Sunday afternoon. King Street was teeming with people from the Soundwaves concert in Sydney Park and the cafes and pubs were full of laughter. Soon the street lights would come on and the restaurants would start filling up and the neon signs would lend a tawdry glamour to the old town.
It will look like this on the streets of Tehran just before the American blitz starts. They say Iran is a beautiful place, but bright lights will probably not burn there for many years, and the country, like Iraq before it, will be poisoned by radiation from DU munitions, if not actual nuclear bombs, for thousands of years to come.

To hell with summer soldiers and sunshine patriots
30 January 2007
I was sunning myself with a cider outside the Brushtail Café on Australia Day when a bunch of drunken Anglo yobs spilled out of the pub on the other side of Sydney Road. For a while they waved a big Australian flag at the traffic chanting “Aussie! Aussie! Aussie! Oi! Oi! Oi!” They were mostly young men but I seemed to recognise Peter Debnam and Morris Iemma among their number. Piers Ackerman, Alan Jones, Miranda Devine, Paul Sheehan, Janet Albrechtsen and a bunch of other shock-jocks, right-wing columnists and howardista spin doctors lurked in the pub doorway, urging them on.

An ugly start to the New American Century
1 January 2007
“I can’t see this Iraq Study Group’s report leading to any change”, I said. “What they’re recommending is really no different to current US policy: train a pro-US Iraqi army, and then gradually withdraw, but that’s a nonsense. Under the tutelage of Maliki’s government, that army will be overwhelmingly Shiite and pro-Iranian. Unless the Sunni and Baathist resistance prevails, all the invasion will have achieved – apart from generalised social misery in Iraq – is Iranian hegemony over the Gulf.”
All hat, no cattle
Why John Howard is the greatest little faker in Western politics

19 November 2006
“Do the maths yourself. America has a population just shy of 300 million and it’s got about 140,000 ground troops in Iraq, plus airforce people and several thousand mercenaries. An equivalent per capita commitment by Australia – our population is a tad over 20 million – would be at least 10,000, but we’ve only sent 500 soldiers to the war.
Never believe your own shtick

A lesson from the rise and fall of Australian “conservation icons”
1 November 2006

Young Bindi Irwin is all over the news these days and it looks like a cruel thing to this possum. I mean, she’s just a little kid. She still has a decade of school in front of her. And the angst of teenhood. And maybe she’ll find, as she gets older, that wildlife icon just ain’t her. Then what? Irwin built a business around personal celebrity. The adulation surrounding Bindi strikes this possum as a desperate attempt to find a commercial substitute.


Be alert and alarmed!
Watch for this stamp on material on this site. Under the reactionary anti-terrorism laws the author and publisher could be up for 7 years in the slammer.

To download free copies of the sedition stamp for your web, email or print publication CLICK HERE.


An elegant resolution to the law-and-order auction
1 October 2006
We’re six months out from the next NSW state election and already there’s frenzied bidding in the law-and-order auction. Peter what’s-his-name, the Liberal leader, is bidding 200 Men-of-Middle-Eastern-Appearance (MoMEA) rounded up instantly on any old charge and bugger the question of guilt, or evidence. The Labor incumbents will top this for sure. I can’t see Morris Iemma throwing in less than 400 MoMEA in orange jumpsuits and leg irons.
Mother of Suckers
The mainstream media swallow the TATP myth

21 August 2006
In which Alex the chemist explains why the idea that you can slip into the airliner toilet and mix two harmless chemicals to make a powerful explosive is preposterous nonsense.

24 July 2006
“By a strange coincidence, today is the 60th anniversary of the bombing of the King David hotel in Jerusalem”, Old Possum remarked, as we waited at Town Hall Square for the march to kick off. “While their air force is unleashing hell in Lebanon, Israelis are dancing on the graves of 92 people killed by the Irgun terrorist organization on 22 July 1946”.
But is it a threesome?
3 July 2006
"D
idja pick up Miranda Devine’s little slip in her Sydney Morning Herald column the other day?” Joadja asked, when she brought up another box of tissues and a four litre bottle of apple juice and slipped between the sheets to comfort me. “She wrote that Pru Goward and her husband, whathisname … John Barnett … had written an ‘autobiography’ of John Howard.”
Made in Australia
Countdown to East Timor’s subcontract coup d’etat

29 May 2006
The one thing East Timorese Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri didn’t want was for his small dirt-poor nation to be caught in the vise-like grip of the World Bank and its so-called “economic reforms”. Consequently, Alkatiri declined to accept their offers of loans. That was a fundamentally smart strategic decision, but it probably doomed his leadership.
It’s the oil, stupid
24 May 2006
“The energy panic is here. The inevitable crisis that a handful of us have warned of for over a decade is upon us. Oil’s hit US$75 a barrel, driven on by Bush’s mad plan to nuke Iran. Welcome to the rest of our lives.” Old Possum said, taking another sip from his cider.
Sliding towards the vortex
27 March 2006
Every day now, the Bush regime ratchets up the rhetoric against Iran. Bush’s people are constantly threatening a military solution to Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. Many people assume, or hope, that the US is just posturing, but bluffing is a dangerous game. If your bluff is called, what do you do then?
Miranda Devine and the strange case of the drug raid that never was

28 February 2006
So Miranda Devine's “journalism” had come to this: it’s okay not to let the actual facts stand in the way of a good story if it highlights what you think is really going on and advances your political message. That spin came through loud and clear from her piqued defence of police “whistleblower” Tim Priest, who had belatedly been exposed by Herald journalists as, well, a fantasist.
Matrimonial on the Indian Pacific
1 February 2006
Travelling to Perth on the Indian Pacific, our hero encounters Bob Ellis. What is it about paunchy, depressive, balding, rheumy-eyed writers that women find so fatally attractive?
Welcome to the New World Disorder
26 December 2005
In which Nick chats to an old retired colonel who explains what might lie behind the great Australian Army reorganisation.
The truth hurts
Why John Howard needs the sedition laws
28 November 2005
All these new laws – IR, terrorism, sedition – are driven by an intuitive dread. Howard feels in his bones that turbulent and disastrous times are upon us and he’s arming himself with draconian laws to keep his capitalist friends rich and his party in power.
An office of profit after the Crown
1 November 2005
Nobody was happy, not the motorists, who were being slugged $3.56, each way, for a couple of kilometres, nor the public transport users who discovered that, under the contract, the consortium would have to be compensated if public transport development hit traffic flowing into the toll booths. It was a double whammy against the public interest.
Houston: “We have a problem”
What to do with Space Cadet Bush?
29 September 2005
It’s the elite Bush should be worried about – the seedy crony-capitalists who own the US of A. The Iraq imbroglio is bad enough, but after the hurricane debacle the greedheads who once put faith in this idiot-child to gull the masses will now regard him as a failure, a dud, a loser, a space cadet; a man who hasn’t measured up to the challenges; a president who isn’t fooling anybody any more.
The last Big Mac
Did Hasib Hussain suddenly fear that Allah might be a vegan?

29 August 2005
On his way to bomb the No. 30 bus at London’s Tavistock Square – and thereafter to meet Allah in Paradise – Hasib Hussain stopped off at the Scottish family restaurant to buy a Big Mac. This fascinating new revelation about the 7/7 bombings comes from yet another of those anonymous sources deep inside the police investigation, by way of The Independent (Thursday 25 August), a newspaper I once held in some regard.
Somehow Hasib’s mundane act of gustatory desperation doesn’t seem to square with the picture of a fanatical Islamic terrorist on a mission to send as many infidels as possible to their doom
.
A fast-moving investigation
1 August 2005
It’s been fascinating to watch , from afar, the development of the London bombings investigation.
There are really two investigations: the official police probe and, in a parallel universe, the media investigation – which is the important one. Check the actual news releases on the London Metropolitan Police website, and you’ll find precious little: On 7 July three bombs exploded on London trains and one on a bus; something to do with four young Islamic chaps, apparently; many dead; the suspects seem to have died in the explosions; public asked to help ... That’s Scotland Yard for you: all British reserve; guarded and imprecise; cards played close to the chest.
Peak Oil
The turd on the table

1 July 2005
Tarkis plonked three ciders down on the table. “Is that the best Sydney’s ‘newspaper of record’ can do? Talk about studious avoidance of the facts! The price of crude suddenly hits $60 a barrel in the middle of the northern summer and they put it down to lingering concerns about refining capacity? What do they think will happen during the northern winter, when demand really shoots up?”
Whooping it up with the black ops boys ...
The Abu Musab al-Zarqawi Show

1 June 2005
The last week of May was a nail-biting time for fans of the greatest soap opera to come out of the War on Terror.
By week’s end the world’s most wanted terrorist – scourge of the occupation and Shiite Muslims, representative of Osama bin Forgotten – gravely wounded in battle, had made his way to the safety of Shiite Iran. If you believe that, I have a second-hand Nissan Bluebird to sell you.
Carr stalled in policy gridlock

1 May 2005
The controversial M4 East motorway project has been put on hold while the Carr Government tries to figure out what to do next. Could this be the end of the road for the disastrous pro-motorway policy and the beginning of a public transport renaissance?
Don't loiter near the exit:
Military debacle and economic decline haunt the Bush regime

1 April 2005
The Bushies are gambling on being able to guarantee a supply of the cheap oil on which the US depends – and on being able to sell what’s left to an oil-hungry world. It all looked so simple to the Neo-cons, but with the world looking on, it’s all gone horribly wrong, and now the US is as badly overstretched militarily as Britain was in 1940.
Fear and despair at Owl Farm
Hunter S. Thompson cashes his chips

1 March 2005
The Greatest Prose Stylist Since Jane Austen blows his brains out. Why? Nick, Joadja and Old Possum mull the possible reasons.

Too good to be true
Paul Sheehan and the magic water debacle

1 February 2005
The inventor of the magic mineral water that’s supposed to cure everything from arthritis to Alzheimers plus make you live forever and have many babies skips town causing celebrity right-wing journalist Paul Sheehan a great deal of embarrassment.




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BREAKING:
Australian Federal Police accused of conducting warrantless raids on Aboriginal communities in advance of APEC Conference


23 August 2007, 10:15 pm
Possum News Network has just been forwarded the following email addressed to the ABC's Kerry O'Brien. If true it signals an outrageous escalation of the Howard government's war on Aboriginal people and their personal and property rights. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Lives on the line for conservation
By Gavin Gatenby
23 July 2007


The Thin Green Line: international ranger documentary

Region-free DVD, 82 min.
Produced and directed by Sean Willmore

One upon a time – in evolutionary terms, only the blink of an eye ago – wild nature covered our planet and the human–engineered landscapes of cities and farms were insignificant patches.
Now, of course, the opposite is true. Wild ecosystems are rare, typically small, often fragile ‘islands’ of habitat. Hence the need for national parks, nature reserves, laws, management plans and rangers.

The Thin Green Line is the story of the rangers whose difficult, often dangerous, even at times fatal, job it is to protect these precious fragments; to conserve the myriad plants and animals bequeathed to us by the processes of evolution. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

"New" Pearl Harbour photos are a cheap email propaganda fraud

By Gavin Gatenby
7 July 2007 1245 AM

A couple of hours ago I received, by email, a Powerpoint file purporting to reveal newly-discovered photos of the aftermath of the December 1941 Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbour.
The photos are incredibly dramatic but they certainly didn't, as claimed, come out of a Box Brownie that's suddenly turned up, after 66 years, in a locker somewhere. These "new" Pearl Harbour photos are genuine and probably all are from publicly-accessible archives. Why are they suddenly circulating now – proliferating everywhere – with this laughable story about having just been discovered? READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

In the time of Sakura
The piano music of Mike Nock

By Phil Sandford
3 May 2007

In the discussion session Nock described himself as a composer driven by emotion. But he added that the intellectual task of fully notating his music had been a humbling experience which made him appreciate even more the contribution made by the great classical composers.
‘In the time of Sakura’ shows that Nock has seamlessly integrated his many musical influences and has achieved a powerful integration of emotion and intellect. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

An email to Fox News' Bill O'Reilly

From: James B <lordben@tpg.com.au>
Subject: The view from the South
Date: 30 April 2007 11:48:39 PM
To: Bill O'Reilly <bill.oreilly@foxnews.com>
CC: 18 others
Hi Bill, the news filtering through to the Land of Oz concerning your activities continues to be less than inspiring. We hear that the delightful Rosie O'Donnell was attacked left right and center for two weeks solid by "such corporate media establishment hacks as Bill O'Reily, Joe Scarborough and Danny Bonaduce who seriously called for her to be executed". Pharr out. Things certainly seem to be degenerating fast in the Land of the Phreeee. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Ten days out from the NSW elections
Politicians in denial on global warming

By Matt Mushalik
15 March 2007

On Monday evening’s 7.30 Report, climatologist James Hansen from NASA, a respected scientist, gave some clear answers to Kerry O’Brien: “ … If we get warming of two or three degrees Celsius, then I would expect that both West Antarctica and parts of Greenland would end up in the ocean, and the last time we had an ice sheet disintegrate, sea level went up at a rate of 5 metres in a century, or one metre every 20 years. That is a real disaster, and that's what we have to avoid …”
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>


Chain up Cheney! Bring Hicks home!

Sydney anti-war marchers defy police ban and reclaim the streets


A Possum News Network Exclusive
Words and pictures by Gavin Gatenby
22 February 2007
This evening 1500 anti-war demonstrators overcame a strong police presence and, after a half-hour confrontation with the NSW riot squad and mounted police marched to the US Consulate to protest against US Vice-President Dick Cheney's visit to Australia and the five-year imprisonment of David Hicks in Guantanamo Bay. SEE THE PICTURES >>>

In the thrall of the monster drug barons
21 February 2007

Isn't it good to see that the best politicians money can buy are so consistent in their attitudes to public health and moral fibre. On one hand they enjoy a felch-fest with the drug dealers and poker machine pushers of the Australian Hotel Association (SMH 13/02/07), while on the other they sool the sniffer dogs onto the punters going to the Big Day Out, and just about everything else, in case they might have a reefer or eccy pill in their pocket. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Schlock 'n Awe coming to the “Land of the Phree”

THE VIEW FROM BONDI

20 February 2007

Yessiree, y'can almost sniff it in the air ... that familiar smell of napalm in the morning! My best guess is this ... Botch Casually and Dead Eye Dick have waded so far into a boiling broth of blood and criminality, both without AND within the "homeland" front, they have little choice but to trudge forth with the fatally flawed PNAC plan to control world proceedings for the duration of the 21st century and beyond ... despite neocon Schlock 'n Awe plans becoming a little bogged down in the ancient Land of the Twin Rivers. Don't get me wrong, one knows that the US is NOT constructing a vast, palatial (and heavily fortified) embassy within Baghdad's precincts, and pouring billions into Halliburton-built permanent military establishments poised above all the oil fields ... with the intention of leaving Iraq to the Iraqis. Why, that would mean capitulation to, to, to ... the terrorists! READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Blow struck against "War on Terror"
Weapons of mass distraction checkpoints set up in Sydney


12 September 2006
In the early hours of a very wet Monday 11 September, dozens of 'Weapons of Mass Distraction Checkpoints' appeared across Sydney. As Sydneysiders began their working week, they streamed past the life-size stencils of a soldier in places as diverse as Bondi, Cabramatta, Paddington and the Central Business District. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

TIPS & TRICKS
How to photograph street marches


By Gavin Gatenby, Possum News Network
29 August 2006

Over recent months there have been large and feisty marches against the imperialist wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and most recently against Zionist aggression in Gaza and Lebanon, but the visual record on the web was typically of poor quality, if it existed at all. Thousands marched – sometimes hundreds of thousands – but apart from a few thousand passers-by and, if we’re very lucky, viewers watching a few seconds of TV coverage, nobody much saw what happened.
I just wish more people would try their hand at this simple and inexpensive form of journalism. To help those who want to try, I've put together a few tips and tricks I’ve picked up over the years.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Flinging Faruquie out

By FRANK MARRINAN
A Possum News Network exclusive, 30 August 2006

Today, the hard men and women of the Department of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs had intended to set a deadline for ‘removing’ Muhammad Faruquie from Australia. ‘Remove’ is the immigration department’s euphemism for deport. After 19 years in Australia he was to be ‘removed’ to Pakistan.
But the department hasn’t got its way … yet.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

How to organise a major terrorist scare

The Big Dummy’s guide to security booga-booga

By Gavin Gatenby, Possum News Network
15 August 2006

How easy is it to organise a major terrorist scare like the one that’s currently gridlocking the world’s airports? Dead easy. If you follow a few simple points you can panic the populace and stampede the media with virtually no risk of getting caught. All it takes is a little confidence. Here’s a simple “how-to” for aspiring top-level spooks ... READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Sydney rally and march, Saturday 12 August 2006
Stop the Bombing!
No Israeli occupation of Lebanon and Palestine!


A Possum News Network Exclusive
Words and pictures by Gavin Gatenby
This was the third weekend in a row that big demonstrations have been held in Sydney against Zionist aggression. I'd say this march numbered 10,000. It stretch for two blocks and across all four lanes of George Street before turning up King Street to Elizabeth Street and then to Hyde Park. Like the other marches it was characterised by an extraordinary diversity of people and organisations both religious and secular. SEE THE PICTURES >>>

Coast of Terror
Mel Gibson, anti-Semitism, Zionism and Mee


By Gavin Gatenby
Possum News Network
1 August 2006

When the Sydney Morning Herald dropped on the bed on Monday morning, Mel Gibson was spread across the top of the front page. The actor and ultra-conservative Catholic some Australians like to call “Our Mel” had levelled a torrent of anti-Semitic abuse at a Malibu traffic cop who'd pulled him over for drunk-driving. The lead story immediately below covered the latest outrages committed by the Zionist armed forces in Lebanon. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Stop the Israeli attack on Lebanon & Gaza!
Freedom & justice for Palestine!


A Possum News Network Exclusive
22 July 2006
Words and pictures by Gavin Gatenby
I knew this was going to be a big demonstration when I boarded a city-bound train at Turrella station, 10 kilometres from the city. Sydney trains hold well over 2000 travellers and they aren't normally full on Saturday mornings. This one was packed with people heading for the demonstration. It was all I could do to squeeze into the foyer. The crowd was singing Lebanese and Arab resistance songs and at one stage, the Palestinian anthem. SEE THE PICTURES >>>

Rally for Palestine

A Possum News Network Exclusive
02 July 2006

An emergency rally was called at short notice to protest against the Israeli assault on Gaza and the West Bank. Australian Palestinians and supporters assembled in Wiley Park in Sydney's inner south-west and marched down Canterbury Road then Haldon Street Lakemba to a rally. SEE THE PICTURES >>>

Breaking: Brits, Japs and Aussies to cut and run from Iraq?
By Gavin Gatenby
Possum News Network
16 June 2006

Today, the Japanese agency Kyodo News reported that “British, Australian and Japanese troops will transfer security responsibilities in southern Iraq to Iraqi authorities next week, and withdraw from the area soon afterward”.
Citing anonymous Coalition sources the agency report indicated that, following a meeting of the three countries in London last week, a rapid pullout would be announced early next week. Significantly, it appears that the US government was not consulted on the decision.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Immigration dumps sick child on remote island

Is it possible that DIMIA will never learn?

By Frank Marrinan
Possum News Network
4 June 2006

Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone’s troops have whipped a sick, nine-year old child out of a Brisbane hospital and dumped the her and her Afghani asylum-seeker parents on Horne Island, a rocky speck a couple of hours fast boat-run from Cape York. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Tony Blair’s Washington visit and the curious case of a disappearing BBC story
By Gavin Gatenby
Possum News Network
27 May 2006

On Friday 26 May, just hours after Tony Blair and George Bush began talks in Washington on the “progress” of their occupation of Iraq, a curious article appeared on the BBC’s website. Headlined “Iran FM begins first Baghdad trip”, it was posted at 0617 GMT. Penned by one Pam O'Toole, it painted a faux-objective, strangely upbeat, picture of the Iranian foreign minister’s impending visit to Iraq. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Sorry George, can’t help with the Iran business
Behind John Howard’s Timor provocation


By Gavin Gatenby
Possum News Network
15 May 2006

On Friday 12 May, shortly before flying off to see George Bush, Australian Prime minister John Howard did two remarkable things. Firstly, he ruled out Australian involvement in any military action in Iran. “I’m not in favour of other than trying to achieve a diplomatic solution”, he told the media. Then he announced an unexpected and highly provocative military build-up for a possible new occupation of East Timor.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

In the house of the rising scum

By The Blue Collar Bohemian
1 May 2006

On Friday nights on SBS TV, there’s usually a program on a topic of "adult interest". At times it’s covered guys obsessed with women so fat that sex with them is physically impossible, women with big breasts they didn't want and men with small dicks they didn't like, among other related topics. A program about a STD clinic in London featured amongst others a South African chap named Gary who enjoyed anonymous sex in hotel and bar toilets with other chaps, and as a result contracted oral gonorrhea. We got to see the nurse at the clinic examine Gary with a throat swab that was put down his neck a good eight inches, while Gary exhibited no sign of a gag reflex at all.
With the months to the next NSW state election drifting by I was reminded of Gary by a recent report in the Herald titled "Dinner with Iemma comes at a hefty price".
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Spooky stuff
By invitation, the FBI and the NYPD set up shop in Sydney


By Lawrence Gibbons
1 May 2006

Late last year, with little fanfare and even less public scrutiny, the US Federal Bureau of Investigation opened a local office here in Sydney. Located in the US consulate way up high in the MLC in Martin Place, an FBI agent will provide back up assistance and training to Australia’s Federal and State police. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

On lives squandered in war for the greed and powerlust of the worthless few

By The Blue Collar Bohemian
24 April 2006
Anzac Day - the One Day of the Year, the day that "blooded" us as a "nation". Lest We Forget. As someone who, like many, has been touched, through the suffering of close relatives, by the scourge of war, I have mixed feelings about this day of national remembrance. I need to ask what exactly it is we remember, and why. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

The rise and fall of General Motors

By The Blue Collar Bohemian
19 April 2006

With the corporate giant seemingly on its knees we may be seeing the demise of the company that set the stage for the transport related social, environmental and energy problems we have today.
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Rumours of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s survival were greatly exaggerated
So who really killed Nick Berg?


By Gavin Gatenby
Possum News Network
11 April 2006

For those of us who feel a strange compulsion to analyse the seedy world of US black operations, and who had always doubted the recent existence of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, vindication probably doesn’t come any closer than this. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Troops home now!
Peace & justice for the Iraqi people!
Sydney march and rally Saturday 18 March 2006
Part of the global weekend of action on the third anniversary of the invasion


Around 2000 people marched from Belmore Park, opposite Central railway station, up Elizabeth Street to Liverpool Street then down George Street through the cinema precinct and back to Belmore Park. SEE THE PICTURES >>>

Liberal powerbroker was a harbinger of the new fascism
Lyenko Urbanchich 1923–2006


By The Blue Collar Bohemian
2 March 2006
Lyenko Urbanchich, who has died aged 83, was a symbol of everything that conservative politics stands for. A self proclaimed “Slovenian Patriot”, Urbanchich came to Australia after WWII to escape accountability for his actions in support of Nazi Germany during that war. He then found a comfortable place in the bosom of the Liberal Party, ever happy to embrace, as “good anti-communists”, the slime oozing out from the collapse of the fascist Axis. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

The Askariya Mosque job and the coming war on Iran

By GAVIN GATENBY
1 March 2006

So who really did have a motive for the very professional demolition job on Samarra’s Golden Dome Mosque?
Many analysts have pointed to the general advantages that flow to the imperialist occupation from fostering sectarian divisions – the traditional divide-and-rule strategy – but I think we can be a lot more specific. I believe we can reliably point to the United States as the real culprit and see a clear motive in the geo-strategic nightmare created by Washington’s determination to wage war on Iran.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

The struggle in Swaziland
By The Blue Collar Bohemian
27 February 2006
Swaziland is a "faraway country of which we know little", as Neville Chamberlain might have said. So why does it matter?
The western corporate media is constantly full of the abominable behaviour of Robert Mugabe, a revolutionary who defeated a white racist government. However, not far from Zimbabwe there’s small landlocked country, with South Africa on three sides and Mozambique on the other that very seldom rates a mention. This is the Kingdom of Swaziland, ruled by the Dlamini family dynasty since 1750
. READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

Behind every great fortune is a great theft
By the Blue Collar Bohemian
14 February 2006

As the new year grinds on its way Your Correspondent has been reflecting on recent events, and has come to some pretty depressing conclusions about the immediate future, given the Brave New World we are being blessed with, courtesy of our Chosen Oppressors.
READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>

The loonies take over the asylum
Murdoch hack counsels an “unconscionable” war on Iran

By GAVIN GATENBY
5 February 2006

Anyone who doubts the determination of key elements of the US-led imperialist bloc to wage a ‘preemptive’ war against Iran should read the recent opinion piece by Gerard Baker from The Times (it was reproduced in The Weekend Australian 28-29 Jan 2006). Not much appears in The Times by accident, and certainly not a piece of such resounding bellicosit.
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The Uzbekistan torture documents
A PNN public service
1 January 2006

The British Government has been quick to deny that it practices, or tolerates the practice of, torture. So it is perhaps not suprising that it is determined that you should not see the following documents... READ THE FULL ARTICLE >>>




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