on 20-04-2014 10:21 PM
As it's more than 100 days now, it has been suggested that a new thread was needed. The current govt has been breaking promises and telling lies at a rate so fast it's hard to keep up.
This below is worrying, "independent" pffft, as if your own doctor is somehow what? biased, it's ridiculous. So far there is talk of only including people under a certain age 30-35, for now. Remember that if your injured in a car, injured at work or get ill, you too might need to go on the DSP. They have done a similar think in the UK with devastating consequences.
and this is the 2nd time recently where the Govt has referred to work as welfare???? So when you go to work tomorrow (or tuesday), just remember that's welfare.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-20/disability-pensioners-may-be-reassessed-kevin-andrews/5400598
Independent doctors could be called in to reassess disability pensioners, Federal Government says
The Federal Government is considering using independent doctors to examine disability pensioners and assess whether they should continue to receive payments.
Currently family doctors provide reports supporting claims for the Disability Support Pension (DSP).
But Social Services Minister Kevin Andrews is considering a measure that would see independent doctors reassess eligibility.
"We are concerned that where people can work, the best form of welfare is work," Mr Andrews said at a press conference.
on 02-06-2014 02:27 PM
on 02-06-2014 02:28 PM
Haha, you beat me to it. I was going to post the same clip :D:D
on 02-06-2014 06:38 PM
on 02-06-2014 06:48 PM
@freakiness wrote:Tony Dumb Dumb
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x1y1ez7_tony-abbott-last-week-tonight_news
Laugh out loud.
on 02-06-2014 07:07 PM
the adults in charge
Effect of co-payment on hospitals and medicine access has not been assessed
Coalition's plans were put together without any modelling of the impact on emergency departments and prescription use
The Abbott government has not taken into account the impact of its $7 GP fee on hospital emergency departments, nor has it assessed the effect of higher medicine costs on people filling their prescriptions.
Health officials confirmed at a Senate estimates hearing in Canberra on Monday that the department had not prepared modelling on those two potential consequences of the government's planned health changes.
on 02-06-2014 07:36 PM
I could hear him today ranting about kewers (like sewers) and was trying to figure out what the heck he wsa talking about. I was hearing it as queueers, as in people standing in queues, then it dawned on me that he meant cures. It was the funniest way I've ever heard cures spoken. It sounded nothing like cures.
on 02-06-2014 10:59 PM
"Low self-esteem either enhances negative evaluations of others, or makes you less likely to suppress those biases you already harbor."
If the pink hat fits !
nɥºɾ
on 02-06-2014 11:10 PM
on 03-06-2014 10:01 AM
on 03-06-2014 11:52 AM
Freakiness already posted the clip but it deserves another mention.Pink hat? someone wears a blue sleep mask.
Tony Abbott roasted by John Oliver on HBO show Last Week Tonight
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has been roasted on a satirical US TV show that presented a highlight reel of some of his stickiest slip-ups and cringe-worthy comments.
HBO satirical news program Last Week Tonight with John Oliver aired a segment mercilessly lambasting Mr Abbott, and presenting clips of his most embarrassing career gaffes in a tongue-in-cheek effort to explain why his personal approval rating may have plunged to 30 per cent.
All the forecasts point to a strong result for first-quarter GDP growth when the national accounts are released on Wednesday, but while the Aussie dinghy is sitting in calm waters and warm sunshine at the moment, there are storm clouds up ahead.
It looks like March quarter GDP was hit by two beams of sunshine: housing investment lifted domestic demand and a burst of iron ore imports by China lifted net exports. Neither will continue.
The Abbott government’s decision to attempt two big, controversial social reforms (university fee deregulation and GP co-payments) at the same time as increasing taxes and freezing welfare indexation has produced a sudden collapse in consumer sentiment, and increasingly looks like a shot to the foot.
China’s problems are also self-inflicted. The authorities there are simultaneously battling air pollution and the credit boom, both of which were allowed to get out of control.
China’s war against credit and pollution, through tight monetary policy and factory closures, will cost it growth and cost Australia exports.
At the same time, both Europe and America are struggling. The European Central Bank is expected to try some more monetary stimulus when it meets this week, to try to force the euro down and get the banks lending, while in the US business investment has stalled and rising inequality is suppressing household demand.
Opening up tertiary education fees to competition between universities might be a wonderful idea and might drive fees down, as Education Minister Christopher Pyne argued yesterday.
Then again, it might be a rubbish idea. The university business might turn out to be what it seems: an oligopoly with a few powerful players able to set prices. Already, one of the most powerful, the University of Melbourne, has foreshadowed fee increases of up to 61 per cent.
Will Monash Uni really slash its fees instead and go after Melbourne’s market share? Hard to say.
Either way, it’s a big reform that is going to cause disruption and uncertainty, and it was a courageous idea to do it at the same time as bringing down the traditional horror first budget.
Likewise, imposing a price signal onto doctor visits with a Medicare co-payment might be a good idea too. Something has to be done to limit health costs.
Except the government has decided to channel the money off into a Medical Research Fund, which is tasked with finding more things to go to the doctor for, instead of improving the budget bottom line. In any case, it seems pretty clear that the Medical Research Fund has not softened the blow to consumers of the $7 co-payment.
Bottom line: the government has taken a mallet to consumer confidence at the same time as exports are coming under pressure.
China’s industrial production growth slowed from 9.7 per cent in 2013 to 8.7 per cent in the first four months of 2014.
The sharpest decline happened in the most polluted areas, in particular Hebei province around Beijing, where IP growth fell to below 4 per cent. The dramatic slowdown in Hebei coincided exactly with the State Council’s introduction of its “Action Plan for Air Pollution Prevention”.
Societe Generale’s economists have surveyed all regional data across China and found that the more polluted the region, the greater the slowdown. The six provinces with the highest level of pollutants accounted for 1.3 percentage points of the 1.7 per cent deceleration in the past seven months.
The Action Plan is resulting in factory closures and a campaign to replace coal with renewable energy. A new Environmental Protection Law becomes effective from January 2015, which will introduce penalties that compound daily for polluting factories in place of the previous one-off charge. Also, local officials have to assume responsibility for the oversight of breaches.
The impact of all this on China’s economic growth and its imports for coal and iron ore from China has been underestimated.
Meanwhile, the monetary authorities are living on a different planet, tightening interest rates even as the economy slows sharply and prices decline. Indeed the risk of deflation in China appears almost as great as it is in Europe.
On top of that, China’s export markets in Europe and America look increasingly challenged, with slow growth and weak consumer demand.
The bottom line is that the Chinese government’s target of 7.5 per cent growth is looking optimistic. Already, growth has slowed to 7.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2014.
The joy of a C&P from a good source and not a DIY "citizen journalist"