Tony Abbott's Support Page

A reminder of the debt that Australia has, while Labor can bury their heads and deny it exists the fact remains we have a huge problem with debt and sooner than later the chips will fall, no business, no state and no country can keep operating in the red, eventually those we own the money to will own us. Who will own us?
The state of Qld has debt of $80 billion dollars, Labor are saying they don’t think it’s that bad, Bill Shorten on Australia’s debt, there is no debt crisis, there is a crisis and we are in this situation because of Labor, no one else and the bottom line is Labor can’t fix this problem, their speciality is creating debt not fixing debt.

 
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Tony Abbott's Support Page

medibill.jpg

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Icy

 

That is very good.

 

Just about sums up Labor !

 

Their is a good "poem" I think that is called "Somebody else", also applies to a few Smiley Wink

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Fairfax ran claims against Joe Hockey ‘in an act of petty spite’

 

 

JOE Hockey says accusing opponents of lies and hypocrisy is part of the rough and tumble of politics, but he was absolutely devastated by a newspaper headline that said he was a “treasurer for sale”.

 

On May 5 last year, the Herald and The Age ran the story under the headline “Treasurer for Sale” on their front pages, claiming the North Sydney Forum charged annual membership fees of up to $22,000 for perks including “VIP” meetings with Mr Hockey.

 

Mr Hockey claims the articles falsely implied he accepted bribes to influence his decisions, corruptly sold privileged access to businessmen and lobbyists, and knowingly permitted a Liberal fundraising forum with which he was associated to accept money from the “corrupt Obeid family”.

 

The Herald and Age were forced to apologise to Mr Hockey after an earlier report that incorrectly claimed the Treasurer personally had to pay back money to Australian Water Holdings.

 

AWH was being examined by the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption and was connected to corrupt former NSW Labor MP Eddie Obeid’s family. NSW Liberal figures, including senator Arthur Sinodinos, were also connected to the company.

 

The court heard that Mr Kenny was told to rewrite an analysis piece to go with the story because Mr McClintock claims it did “not put the boot in” hard enough to Mr Hockey.

 

Mr McClintock also told the court the “Treasurer for Sale” story was all but finished by the end of March but was released a week before the federal budget to do “maximum damage” to Mr Hockey.

 

Entire Article Here

 

 

 

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Hockey defamation trial

 

.....Mr Collins [ Fairfax Media's barrister]. also took Mr Hockey through a series of tweets posted by the @joehockey handle during 2012 and 2013, including one written on 16 July 2013 about then-prime minister Kevin Rudd that said: "Access to Rudd, at a price... FACT"

 

Mr Hockey said he couldn't be sure if he wrote the tweets or someone on his staff did on his behalf, but he was happy to accept they had been written in his name.

 

Dr Collins also showed Mr Hockey tweets in which he called former Prime Minister Julia Gillard a "disgrace" and suggested Mr Rudd had lied about costings.

 

Dr Collins put it to him that calling someone a liar, disgrace or a hypocrite was "part of the rough and tumble of politics".

Mr Hockey agreed that robust language was part and parcel of life in a democracy.

 

"Do you accept that you give as good as you get?" Dr Collins asked.

 

"Yes," Mr Hockey said.

 

The trial continues on Tuesday. 

 

http://www.smh.com.au/national/hockey-defamation-trial-treasurer-not-intimately-involved-in-setting-...

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Fairfax are not having a good week and it’s only Monday, before they even arrived at court to face Joe Hockey they had to fork out a record $500,000.


This is just sheer laziness on the journalists part, not checking and the damage they cause is not acceptable.


Fairfax Media has paid out one of the largest defamation settlements in Australian media history for publishing a front-page story claiming an... innocent teenager was a terrorist.


Diary can reveal The Age’s ¬editor-in-chief Andrew Holden’s blunder, in which a picture of 19-year-old Abu Bakar Alam wrongly identified him as a “teenage terrorist” who stabbed two police officers, cost Fairfax a record $500,000 in damages.


If they keep going at this rate they will be broke, from memory they have some more court cases from the Qld election to deal with yet, couldn’t happen to nicer people.

 

Teenager Abu Bakar Alam reportedly wins ‘record $500k payout’ after The Age wrongly branded him a te...

 

 The Australian’s Sharri Markson reports that The Age’s blunder from editor-in-chief Andrew Holden’s newspaper, in which a picture of Abu Bakar Alam wrongly identified him as a “teenage terrorist” who stabbed two police officers, cost Fairfax a record $500,000 damages.

 

He was incorrectly identified as Numan Haider, the man who stabbed two police officers before he was shot and killed in Endeavour Hills.

 

 

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Icy

You are right, sloppy journalism on both counts.

I am surprised "legal" let the Hockey one pass.

Any time newspapers spend in court is a waste.



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Icy

 

You will like this one

 

 

How the tax system works

 

 

Every day, ten men go out for beer and the bill for all ten comes to £100… If they paid their bill the way we pay our taxes,

it would go something like this…

The first four men (the poorest) would pay nothing.

The fifth would pay £1.

The sixth would pay £3.

The seventh would pay £7.

The eighth would pay £12.

The ninth would pay £18.

The tenth man (the richest) would pay £59.

So, that’s what they decided to do.

The ten men drank in the bar every day and seemed quite happy with the arrangement, until one day, the owner threw them a curve ball.

“Since you are all such good customers,” he said, “I’m going to reduce the cost of your daily beer by £20″. Drinks for the ten men would now cost just £80.

The group still wanted to pay their bill the way we pay our taxes. So the first four men were unaffected. They would still drink for free; but what about the other six men? – the paying customers.

How could they divide the £20 windfall so that everyone would get his fair share?

They realised that £20 divided by six is £3.33. But if they subtracted that from everybody’s share, then the fifth man and the sixth man would each end up being paid to drink his beer.

So, the bar owner suggested that it would be fair to reduce each man’s bill by a higher percentage the poorer he was, to follow the principle of the tax system they had been using, and he proceeded to work out the amounts he suggested that each should now pay . . . and so

The fifth man, like the first four, now paid nothing (100% saving)

The sixth now paid £2 instead of £3 (33% saving)

The seventh now paid £5 instead of £7 (28% saving)

The eighth now paid £9 instead of £12 (25% saving)

The ninth now paid £14 instead of £18 (22% saving)

The tenth now paid £49 instead of £59 (16% saving)

Each of the six was better off than before and the first four continued to drink for free. But, once outside the bar, the men began to compare their savings.

“I only got a pound out of the £20 saving,” declared the sixth man.

He pointed to the tenth man ”but he got £10!”

“Yeah, that’s right,” exclaimed the fifth man. “I only saved a pound too. It’s unfair that he got ten times more benefit than me!”

“That’s true!” shouted the seventh man. “Why should he get £10 back, when I got only £2 . . . the wealthy get all the breaks!”

“Wait a minute,” yelled the first four men in unison, “we didn’t get anything at all. This new tax system exploits the poor!”

The nine men surrounded the tenth and beat him up.

The next night the tenth man didn’t show up for drinks, so the nine sat down and had their beers without him. But when it came time to pay the bill, they discovered something important. They didn’t have enough money between all of them for even half of the bill

And that, boys and girls, journalists and government ministers, is how our tax system works. The people who already pay the highest taxes will naturally get the most benefit from a tax reduction. Tax them too much, attack them for being wealthy, and they just may not show up anymore. In fact, they might start drinking overseas, where the atmosphere is somewhat friendlier.

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@icyfroth wrote:

 

Fairfax are not having a good week and it’s only Monday, before they even arrived at court to face Joe Hockey they had to fork out a record $500,000.


This is just sheer laziness on the journalists part, not checking and the damage they cause is not acceptable.


Fairfax Media has paid out one of the largest defamation settlements in Australian media history for publishing a front-page story claiming an... innocent teenager was a terrorist.


Diary can reveal The Age’s ¬editor-in-chief Andrew Holden’s blunder, in which a picture of 19-year-old Abu Bakar Alam wrongly identified him as a “teenage terrorist” who stabbed two police officers, cost Fairfax a record $500,000 in damages.


If they keep going at this rate they will be broke, from memory they have some more court cases from the Qld election to deal with yet, couldn’t happen to nicer people.

 

Teenager Abu Bakar Alam reportedly wins ‘record $500k payout’ after The Age wrongly branded him a te...

 

 The Australian’s Sharri Markson reports that The Age’s blunder from editor-in-chief Andrew Holden’s newspaper, in which a picture of Abu Bakar Alam wrongly identified him as a “teenage terrorist” who stabbed two police officers, cost Fairfax a record $500,000 damages.

 

He was incorrectly identified as Numan Haider, the man who stabbed two police officers before he was shot and killed in Endeavour Hills.

 

 


Chickens coming home to roost for Fairfax. Their left bias is so rampant they now try to destroy a sitting parliamentarian, the treasurer no less, and now they are going to pay.

 

It's funny how they never went near the Swan "surplusses" he announced no less than 100 times, all the while he was lying to Australia,  he is still sitting in Parliament, feeding of the public teat.

 

 

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Tony Abbott’s Aboriginal ‘lifestyle choice’ backlash overshadows valid question on remote communities

 

Tony Abbott is right to question the justifications for small indigenous communities where resources don’t match the needs of 21st century survival.

 

Although he might have phrased things better.

 

The Prime Minister yesterday endorsed the West Australian Government’s moves to close down 150 remote and small communities which don’t have the services of larger centres.

 

That means they don’t have the schools, hospitals and police presence other Australians expect and value. Nor do they have the jobs.

 

The betrayal of two crucial needs — education and employment — means young people in these small communities have to leave, at least temporarily, or be totally unqualified for contemporary life.

 

Taxpayers cannot be expected to provide town-quality services in tiny settlements, and while arguments of spiritual association with the land must be respected, they can’t be allowed to justify depriving young people of opportunities taken for granted elsewhere.

 

Mr Abbott said it was “incredibly difficult” for children to get schooling “when there’s only half a dozen of them and getting teachers there is all but impossible”.

 

“We have to be a little bit realistic,” he said.

 

There is a danger the furore over “lifestyle choice” will overshadow the central point the Prime Minister has raised, that the debate over language will take precedence over consideration of what is best for youngsters born into these remote settlements.

 

However, the furore has done him a favour by drawing attention to his concerns.

 

Mr Abbott has done more than any Prime Minister to highlight that small traditional communities can’t expect ready access to the resources only towns and cities can afford.

 

He is challenging the value to young Aborigines of this trade-off, and in the process encouraging indigenous leaders to make their own, public and honest examinations of the issue.

 

Entire Article Here

 

 

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Tony Abbott's 10 biggest gaffes, clangers and cringeworthy moments

 

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/tony-abbotts-10-biggest--clangers-an...

 

The Prince Philip 'knightmare' leading the vote for his worst clanger so far.

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