Wednesday, January 29, 2003

Fiona Stanley, the children's crusader

It is all about prevention. As Fiona Stanley sees it, with one in five Australian teenagers experiencing significant mental health problems, there are just not enough treatment services to cope with the demand.

Instead, resources must be focused on preventing these illnesses from developing, intervening in a child's life before they sink into mental illness or become lost in a life of crime.

In the tried and true tradition of seatbelt education campaigns, HIV/AIDS awareness and Slip, Slop, Slap skin cancer prevention, Professor Stanley, the new Australian of the Year, wants mental health firmly on the preventative public health agenda.

It is a campaign she'll begin from an almost standing start, despite the quality research her Perth-based Telethon Institute for Child Health Research has produced over the past decade.

Public health spending on mental health in Australia is stuck at 6 per cent - less than half the rate of governments in Britain, Canada and New Zealand.

And in NSW, 20 years after the Richmond report into mental health services in NSW recommended "deinstitutionalisation", the state still lacks adequate community and family support services to care for those with mental illnesses outside institutions.

"I don't think we are overstating the point," Stanley says. "Children and adolescents are experiencing significant psychosis, schizophrenia, depression, anxiety - the rates in Australia are rising the same as they are in every country in the Western world."

Stanley says, with some incredulity, that it has only been in the past 20 years that we stopped relying on death certificates as a measure of our health. Take attempted and completed suicide as an example: more males commit suicide, more females attempt it. "Death certificates don't measure that," Stanley says.

What they do measure is falling children's death rates, but this alone is a poor indicator of health. "When we start to look at mental health, we have been shattered by the high levels."

Stanley is an epidemiologist - she measures, describes and explains the occurrence of disease in populations, using the data to argue for the enhancement of health and wellbeing in the community.

She points to several key, marked changes in our society over the past 50 years that have influenced the mental wellbeing of children. Divorce is an obvious one. In the 1950s, less than 10 per cent of marriages involving children ended in divorce - now that rate is nearly half. "At any age that has a major impact on children, because of the kinds of things that lead to divorce ... and the aftermath, the blended families," she says.

Stanley also highlights the significant changes in the distribution of wealth, education opportunities, access to technology, living conditions, and employment opportunities.

There has also been the "rise of the individual and the downgrading of children", she says. There is less community support, less social capital. "Government services and non-government organisations are struggling to handle the numbers of children who are in crisis. That is what I will be preaching this year - we have to put some emphasis on preventing these problems in our society."

You won't find many who disagree with Stanley. From pediatricians to mental health experts, the warnings are the same. Professor Ian Hickie, chairman of the Melbourne-based national depression initiative beyondblue, says there has been great progress in the control of physical illnesses in children and adolescents. "Now the big problem is mental health, which has been a neglected area for so long," Hickie says.

While rates of depression in old people have fallen because of improving physical health, anxiety and depression, suicide rates and alcohol and drug use have increased unchecked in children and adolescents, he says. "We need to focus on the more complex issues around social networks ... disconnected communities and more pressures on parenting. For children, the focus on educational success gets out of proportion with other issues."

Both Stanley and Hickie push the concept of early intervention - not just for children with mental illnesses, but for those on the edge of the criminal justice system."Kids in trouble ... are the worst served by our current mental health system," Hickie says.

For Michael Sawyer, professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Adelaide, the high prevalence of mental illness among young people must be tackled in the same way infectious diseases were 100 years ago.

"It involves interventions on a number of levels - with infectious diseases that meant looking at housing, sanitation, education ... and when you improved those things, you got infectious diseases under control."Mental health problems require a similar range of interventions," he says.

Sawyer warns that children with significant health problems, such as diabetes or asthma, are also at increased risk of developing mental illnesses. "Whatever the case, it is a prevalent condition that causes a substantial amount of distress, which is why it is so important to improve our prevention programs," he says.

Last year Stanley took on the role of chief executive officer at the newly-formed Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth. There are high hopes for the alliance, which will focus on all health problems, from brain development, early childhood issues and education, to crime prevention and early intervention at a child's first contact with criminal justice system. "If you want a future, if you want to compete as a knowledge-based nation ... you cannot have one in five kids going off the rails, because that is one in five future parents going off the rails."

There is a confidence among her colleagues that the alliance, with Stanley at the helm, will succeed. Science and medicine are in her blood. Her husband, Professor Geoffrey Shellam, holds the microbiology chair her father Neville created at the University of Western Australia. Her brother is a top scientist in the US, her sister is an associate professor in veterinary sciences, also in the US.

Born in Sydney in 1946, Stanley moved to Perth with her family in 1956 and later studied medicine at the University of Western Australia. But it was the field of epidemiology that grabbed her - lifting her from the depression that set in after seeing little improvement in basic health standards in the two years she worked in Aboriginal health.

Along with a colleague, Stanley first showed that a maternal diet rich in folic acid can prevent spina bifida in babies. She also found that cerebral palsy is due not so much to birth trauma, as previously thought, as to other factors such as infections or blood incompatibilities. "[Epidemiology] taught me how to use research to improve social justice - that is a pretty powerful thing," she says.

It was one of the institute's first studies on childhood mental health in 1992 that next caught her attention. Eighteen per cent of males and 15 per cent of females reported experiencing mental illness. But only 3 per cent of those teenagers were getting access to assistance. "Are we going to keep on blaming schools for the problems in our children, or are we as a society ... going to take responsibility for preventing these illnesses?" Stanley says."We want to say this is a priority for the nation, that it is more important than anything else."

Twelve months as Australian of the Year should give her the best chance she's had so far to shine the light on one of health's most neglected areas.

A project that goes beyond the personal

Secondary schools are obvious sites for health promotion, holding a captive audience of adolescents who can experience traumas arising from activities such as substance abuse and risky sexual behaviour as they pass through the grades.

One Melbourne-based program has tried to move health promotion in schools beyond the personal to create more supportive environments and strengthen community action and advocacy.

The Gatehouse Project, run in 26 Victorian schools, has achieved remarkable results, says Professor George Patton, from the Centre for Adolescent Health at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne.

"The reductions in tobacco use, binge drinking, socially disruptive behaviour and early initiation of sexual intercourse were of the order of 20 per cent to 30 per cent," Patton says. "It was a new approach - it wasn't health, it wasn't education, it was a combination. The new problems that are facing children and youth are complex in their origin; they will demand communities of all kinds pulling together - schools, families and local neighbourhoods."

The aim of the project was to work out how schools could better respond to and prevent mental illnesses, Patton says. Students were surveyed about their beliefs around security, communication and participation, looking at issues such as bullying, social support and attitudes to school. They were also asked about tobacco, alcohol and other drugs, theft, violence and sex, depression and self-harm.

It was then up to the schools to review the survey reports and introduce strategies to meet their needs.

An adolescent health team was established in each school, made up of school staff and representatives from external health agencies.

Among the strategies implemented were guidelines for the prevention of bullying, mentoring and peer-support programs, Patton says. "It represents a promising new direction for school health promotion work," he says.

Lucky Door Prize

Close your eyes.

What can you see?
Nothing?
So without you there is no beauty.
Then Repeat After Me!
You're nearly as good-looking as I am!
Go on tell your friends..You're nearly as good looking as I am.
Because I am special to me and everyone else is equal to me.

LUCKY!

By The Children January 29 2003

THE EGG: Thanks

Related:

Parents call for feedback on social skills
Parents are calling for the same level of feedback on their children's social development as on their academic progress, according to a national survey.

Call to update suicide prevention strategy: study
A four-year study of suicides by people under the age of 18 in New South Wales, has found little difference between rates of suicide in rural and regional areas and cities.

NSW prisons - primary industry bailed up!
In many quiet regional centres around NSW there is a new primary industry shaping up. It has something to do with Bail but not with bales. The minister for Agriculture Richard Amery who also has the prisons portfolio is now committed to farming prisoners.

NSW police cracked up on antisocial behaviour
Hundreds of extra police will be on the streets of Sydney from this afternoon as part of a major blitz on crime and activities as "antisocial behaviour" says the ABC online last Fri 24 May 2002.

Alcohol is just the beginning
People who start using alcohol by their mid teens are more than twice as likely as others to experiment with different drugs and to become dependent on drugs a major Australian study has found.

RESTORING TRUE JUSTICE:
Australian prisons are fast becoming the new asylums of the third millennium. The prison industry is booming, while Australia spends far less on mental health services than similar countries.

The punishment: Is the 'crime'
The punishment is the crime according to retired chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia Justice Alistair Nicholson. "Smacking a child ought to be seen as assault".

This is not how you eat 'antisocial behaviour'
Process corruption, perjury, planting of evidence, verbals, fabricated confessions, denial of suspects rights, a solicitor to induce confessions, tampering with electronic recording equipment, framing. Generally green lighting crime, and I say Murder, including the kids who overdosed on heroin. No doubt.

The Seed
Respect, you only get out what you have put in. What about Life Skills, Communication and Conflict Resolution. Evolution, perhaps some children and adults miss the whole or part of the course. I did, and so how surprised do you think I was when I realised my parents missed the course as well. Things like Compromise, Win Win, Empathy, and Love. Invisible energy and other skills like public speaking, how to Relate, Assuming, Blaming, Forgiveness, Freedom and Discrimination. This is how I learned respect. If you don't know what it is then how do you relate?

Youth Suicide
I would like to suggest firstly that starting at the root in a holistic pattern so that everyone in our community is included and a seed is planted to prevent our youth dying.

The Tree of Dreams
Come make a wish. I know it will come true, it did for me...

All the way with (LPK) Love Peace and Kindness: Dalai Lama

The Dalai Lama spoke thus; "Love Peace and Kindness, You Can't Break It! "

Communication is a two way street. Threats and punishment solve nothing and serve none. In fact it is against the law in most countries to threaten or punish a person.

By the same token Governments even in Australia see this as a means of controlling the population.

So is it any wonder why other people see threats and punishment as a way to solve problems? And I refer to all the current ideas about conflict resolution and communication skills.

Inviting a person, group, country or class into the decision making process is the only way to resolve conflict.

Or else you don't know about all the possible solutions that may be available for peace.

In fact putting pressure on Sadam yes, but what type of pressure? If people are raising his emotional level and that of his supporters at the cost of lowering his thinking level this means that he will fight to the death.

We need to shift his gears mate and listen to what he has to say, feeding back to him his understanding about our complaints now he has submitted his report to the UN, in the hope that he will listen to us about further complaints, if any.


Anti-war demonstrators turned out in their hundreds of thousands around the world on Saturday to protest against United States military preparations for an invasion of Iraq.

He submitted his inventory about the weapons and that ought to be good enough for Bush to go back to Saddam to explain the discrepancies, if any, and ask for a compromise.

By Comp Romise 29 Jan 03

THE CHICKEN: Teach our children well!

Hill defends decision to attack Iraq: Step by step?
FEDERAL Defence [War] Minister [Sinister] Robert Hill has defended the government's decision to send troops [ send militia] to the Persian Gulf [ to attack Iraq] in readiness for any [pre-emptive strike that would cause a] conflict with Iraq.

Pleas for peace ring the globe
Anti-war demonstrators turned out in their hundreds of thousands around the world on Saturday to protest against United States military preparations for an invasion of Iraq.

Not too late for Iraq peace, Blix says
But we all know that's rubbish now. The Coalition of the Killing were not seeking WMD in Iraq, they were there for their resource wars. So who gave the 'UN' and Blix the wrong information back then? War criminals!

George Bush's other poodle
John Howard, Australia's PM, is the mouse that roars for America, whipping his country into war fever and paranoia about terrorism within.

Better late than never 'Democrats'
The Democrats are confident they will win at least one seat in the upper house in the NSW election by tapping into voter unease about the Carr Government's tough anti-terrorism laws.

US prepares for trade talks with Australia but it's not worth it!
The office of the United States Trade Representative has started formally preparing its negotiating position for the first round of talks on a free trade agreement between Australia and the US.

AUSTRALIA 2002: POLICE STATE LOOMING
As we go to press (December 2002), both the Federal parliament and the NSW parliament are debating legislation that would give police and ASIO agents greater powers of search, interrogation and detention, and significantly erode the fundamental rights of citizens. In both cases, of course, the alleged purpose of the bills is to combat terrorism.

Civil and Democratic Islam websites communicating?
In other words another propaganda green light from the west to bolster support and quell dissent and to continue the Coalition of the Killings illegal and degrading resource wars in the Middle East.

Govt plays down reports of complicity to torture its own citizens
The complicit federal Government says reports there are two highly trained members of Al Qaeda operating in Australia selling GI and are consistent with information it has already released.

Transcript: Abu Bakar Bashir
So actually America wants to fight the Moslems and Islam in Indonesia but using the excuse of terrorism so that it wont be openly (seen as fighting Islam) but under the terror camouflage. This is what I understand about the developments of the investigation into the Bali bombing as well as the other (bombing cases).

GI Strikes again! Plots plots and more plots
Gi's foiled plot to bomb foreign embassies in Singapore, including the Australian high commission, would have to use high sugar levels at the controls of cordial laden truck, a US interrogation of a key GI figure has revealed.

Alarm over terror in 'Australia'?
All of the families ASIO raided in October were believed to have attended the weekend camps, which have run for the past five years. GI cordial was on the refreshment list of drinks.

Special powers? Or political grandstanding?
In NSW, great slews of legislation over the past year have increased powers for everything from police to sniffer pups and train guards and vastly reduced the rights of individuals to engage in civil disobedience, freedom of expression and communication with each other.

First strike and you're out!
The ideology of a super loser? John Howard shocks the nation again. A nation who cannot believe Howard's stupidity following his [complicity in the CIA's false flag operation, the Bali bombing.]

UN charter doesn't reflect new self-defence needs: Hill?
The Defence [War] Minister, Robert Hill, says the United Nations' charter needs to be changed to help countries defend themselves against potential threats. [?] [Pre-emptive strikes on soveriegn nation states like Iraq and Afghanistan?]

Middle Eastern: Specific Legislation
"If there is a target person the police would have powers in relation to that type of person," Mr Costa said. Asked what he meant by "type of person", Mr Costa said: "The example that's been given is if there's a description of somebody, an identikit photograph released by Interpol or other agencies ... these powers may well be exercised on that type of person."

Suspicious police are not trusted to terrorise the community
Short memory my friends when just around the corner police were out of control and now you want to trust Police in NSW to be given extraordinary powers to search vehicles, sites and even a general "type of person" in the event of a terrorism threat or after a terrorist attack.

Howard defends terror alert
Prime Minister John Howard says the Federal Government would not have issued a terror alert if it had not come from a credible source. (America?) Speaking for the first time since the Government revealed the warning, Mr Howard says he wants people to be more careful, but not to stop living. [As long as they don't go dancing in Bali? And sure we'll all be depressed for as long as John Howard and Bob Carr say so.]

Carr backs Fed Govt's terror alert
New South Wales Premier Bob Carr has defended the Federal Government's decision to issue a warning to Australians about a possible terrorist attack in Australia.

NSW Police Force may get 'special powers'
Civil libertarians are questioning the need for further anti-terrorism laws, which will be announced in the New South Wales Parliament on Tuesday.

When Johnny comes marching home again: 'hoorah hoorah'
Posted on the Resistance web page Bronwyn Powell, an organiser of the youth-led mobilisation told Green Left weekly that "in the face of attacks on civil liberties, it is unfortunate that some union officials have felt they need to submit. It could set a negative precedent for upholding the hard-won right to demonstrate in the street."

Police show their real colours 'blue'
Several thousand people have marched through the centre of Sydney protesting against globalisation and the treatment of asylum seekers. Police provided the protesters with an escort despite refusing to issue permits for demonstrations.

Give peace a chance
PIERS AKERMAN DT 28 Nov 02: JUSTICE John Dowd should be removed from the bench. His crime? Stupidity. In a breath-taking display of hand-wringing sanctimonious morality, Dowd has condemned the State and Federal Governments' anti-terrorism measures, claiming they erode rights and give encouragement to oppressive regimes.

Bills, Bills and more Bills NSW Parliament deep in debt
NSW Parliament is unjustifiable creating intellectual debt, Academics, politicians, judges, lawyers and volunteers.

It is an absolute disgrace to: Undermine civil and democratic rights The event, hosted by a State MP Lee Rhiannon just a week before the meeting of the World Trade Organisation in Sydney, has enraged Police Minister Michael Costa, who said using the House for the event was appalling. Upper House Greens MP Lee Rhiannon is hosting the forum for about 60 people in State Parliament's Jubilee Room on November 8.

The scavengers of terror
The NSW Government is to introduce increased police powers bill. Legislation giving New South Wales police special powers to deal with an emergency terrorist situation [emergency scapegoat situation] will be introduced into the New South Wales Parliament today.

Greens more of a human touch
What is a real job? Writes Political Reporter Malcolm Farr Daily Tele Article 11 Nov 2002. "It would start if candidates had a CV of real jobs, such as medicine (Senator Brown), or even zoo keeping (NSW Upper House Green Lee Rhiannon ). Which leaves the type of candidate summed up by Kerry Nettle, who was elected a NSW senator at the poll a year ago.

Koch's Skoff Channel 7' Sunrise
Charming when you run some one down like Zanny Begg member of the National Executive of Resistance using the power of National Media and the presenter is opinionated to go along with it.

The Australian Flag - Burn baby burn
If John Howard is not constitutional and racist. If our obligations to human rights are not being upheld, then burn baby burn the Australian flag in protest and start it with little Lucifer like a picture of Bob Carr.

About Protesting &: Corporate media, Ben English and Rachel Morris who spell their names in capitals? [Yes too right! Ordinary people some protesting against the occupation, murder and genocide of hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children. And you call yourselves reporters? You should hang your head in shame and go get jobs defending those poor innocent people. Shame on you!!!]

Tuesday, January 28, 2003

Fears for poor if Social Services take a social slide?

About 350 clubs and pubs have applied for permission to install about 2300 extra poker machines in their venues in a process that could see machines move from richer to poorer suburbs.

The applications are the first under new rules requiring the applicants to weigh up the adverse social impact against economic benefits of their plans.These social impact assessments reveal information about the gambling spending in the suburbs concerned, for the first time since the Government stopped making the data cheaply available more than two years ago.

The data shows gamblers in poorer council areas, such as Auburn and Burwood, spend up to $1700 per adult per year - or about four times as much on the pokies as those in the richer ones such as Willoughby, Hornsby and Baulkham Hills.

The suburbs with lower average incomes also contain up to four times the number of poker machines per adult resident as those on the North Shore, according to information obtained by the Herald from more than two dozen social impact assessments.

The biggest application comes from the Balmain Tigers Club SuperDome project, which has applied for an extra 450 machines. Others include the Castle Hill RSL, which wants 150 new machines, the Western Suburbs Leagues Club in Leumeah (85) and the Illawarra Catholic Club in Menai (80).

A spokesman for the Gaming Minister, Richard Face, said approval would be "very hard to get".

If approved, the applicant must buy licences to operate the pokies from an existing operator, creating the opportunity for machines to be shifted from less profitable richer suburbs to poorer ones.

In Burwood, operators make an average of $71,755 profit per machine per year - nearly twice the NSW average, and more than double the $31,927 a year per machine in Goulburn.

Licences for pokies in hotels cost between $150,000 and $200,000 after forfeiting one in every three bought under a law designed to reduce the number of machines in operation. Licences for machines in clubs - which make less profit per machine - are understood to cost about $30,000 each.

According to the assessments, the proposals to move the machines would boost gambling spending in the new location and could increase problem gambling.

The director of the NSW Council for Social Service, Alan Kirkland, said it was very difficult to balance the impact of problem gambling against the broader community benefits.

The manager of Wesley Gambling Counselling Services, Rev Chester Carter, said problem gamblers would spend any money they had and pawn anything they could get their hands on.

Sydney City has the highest gambling expenditure per resident, because it is an entertainment centre with relatively few residents. There 28 hotels have applied for a total of 164 additional machines. Overall about 40 clubs and more than 300 hotels have applied to the Liquor Administration Board for extra machines.

Only those applying for more than four machines have to conduct the social impact assessment. Operators wanting to move machines from one venue to another more than one kilometre away also have to conduct such an assessment. The information obtained from these assessments is the latest available, although some date back to 2001.

By Pissed And Broke Jan 28 03

THE GOOSE: Money for Social Services may save more money. Perhaps, a bird in the hand saves two gamblers in the Pub/Club?

Related:

Club expects more problem punters
The Tigers' plan for a super club with 450 poker machines at the SuperDome could create almost 100 new problem gamblers in the five kilometres around the site, according to the Balmain club's application submitted to licensing authorities.

Club expects more problem punters

The Tigers' plan for a super club with 450 poker machines at the SuperDome could create almost 100 new problem gamblers in the five kilometres around the site, according to the Balmain club's application submitted to licensing authorities.

By Roary Lions 28 Jan 03

THE LIONS: Tigers for tea anyone?

Daily Telegraph 'Rough'

Sydney kerb crawlers buying trouble [?]

34 Charges -still on bail [?]

Police find one in six have knives [?]

The above stories were all reported this morning in the Daily Telegraph. These issues highlight community fears and are all standard features in a pre-election grandstand by politicians and right wing media alike.

Surly Bob Carr is being refuelled by the DT, like one of those Migs trying to cross the Atlantic and the DT holding on to Carr's hand grovelling it up to invent irresponsible dislike about judges. Or the other way around.

Once again spreading community fears about crime all despite careful research that clearly shows the opposite.

These stories may sell newspapers to an ill informed population who buy them because they're bored sitting on the train or bus on their merry way to work.

The connection though is more flexible than that. Tit for tat hand in hand the DT is lining its pockets for the advertising and promotion by the Government that spend millions every year advertising with them.

Once again the DT ambush the Separation of Powers between the government and our legal system by manufacturing artificial situations to create public fear in Australia.

These issues they are spreading are all lightweight exploitation using ignorance as the seed.

The thin blue line is expanded as well if you suck up to the police to get a story and tit for tat the police send out stories to the DT to promote police like;

Honeymoon cruise on good ship Moroney [?]

Walking the blue line again is wearing thin [?]

From the river to the mall, it's all in a day's walk on the beat...[?]

Mr. & Mrs. Mandatory Sentencing


Well congratulations to the bride and groom. Could you please be upstanding and raise your glasses for Mr. And Mrs. Mandatory.

By Justice Action 28 January 03

ED: Apparently all you need from Uncle Ken is a lifesaver?

Too right, but to beat police corruption you may need more than that.


Related:

Call to Bronwyn Bishop's Federal Crime Inquiry
I call on Bronwyn Bishop to allow me to produce first evidence about police corruption and to be able to attend Parliament House Sydney without fear of conviction.

Roseanne Catt Case
Almost daily I am hearing of threats, intimidation, bashings and contracts being put on people's lives who have come forward with evidence against these people. We will make sure that this terror is no longer tolerated.

Australia: politicians should watch police
In Sydney yesterday the Opposition police spokesman, Andrew Tink, urged Federal Labor MPs to allow the public hearing of the claims, which include that senior police, the PIC and the Ombudsman's office were failing to investigate legitimate complaints of misconduct, including corruption in the police promotion system.

The community questions ICAC's slagging and fobbing you off?
The ICAC, Commissions, Ombudsman, Police Integrity Commission (PIC), and numerous Tribunals etc, are all arms of government set up as an insurance police for the government's 3 or 4 year election terms. In short they'll be out of office by the time you may be lucky enough to have your matter heard.

Who is bad?
Super Rat? M5? M11? K8? N2? So I trust that some people who, with the photos and guns guessed that a jury would quickly establish a case against a profiled person whom, you just had a picture and a history of. Common knowledge? The government knew their victims would take the blame. Not just chess in court, 'moving around the pieces', but 'putting false evidence, or not enough evidence before the jury."

2,500 crooked detectives? Or a corrupt Government?
Evan Whitton: Either two things occurred. If you said you didn't join the police force to extort money from working girls, your papers were marked 'not suitable for plain clothes' and you were sent back to uniform.

How to become corruption resistant in NSW
Don't trust those who cannot prove themselves with the little amounts of trust you give them. Just because they have a letter of perceived trust doesn't mean they can be trusted.

This is not how you eat 'antisocial behaviour'
Process corruption, perjury, planting of evidence, verbals, fabricated confessions, denial of suspects rights, a solicitor to induce confessions, tampering with electronic recording equipment, framing. Generally green lighting crime, and I say Murder, including the kids who overdosed on heroin. No doubt.

Black Knight - Long way to go home
In line with the current climate of police corruption and the demise of the reform unit set up by Wood, these facts ought to have been a good reason to leave Moroney out of the package as Commissioner.

Bob down and sniff my arse
These are serious invasions of privacy and draconian laws? Where are our democratic soldiers, the lawyers and the barristers who need to take on the government in the courts? Are they plastic? Or to busy feathering their nests? Or have they been cleverly purchased by this black government. Drug test police and politicians, and have the tests independently accessed.

Come in spinner? Or Come in sinner?
"You don't have, in my view very vigilant processes. I suppose it's akin to the problem of corruption within the police," he told the ABC radio. " People say there's corruption with the police (but) do you get the police to investigate problems within their own ranks?

Deeds
I am disturbed by Governments 'actions' in relation to shuffling the police service. Clive Small seconded into Parliament like a cocky in a perch. A breach of the fundamental Separation of Powers Doctrine does not in my view allow the thought of intervening, planning, or shuffling to stack the deck of our police service. The one that suppose to be autonomous according to Lord Denning. Where the Parliamentary Secretary can ask the commissioner of police to 'report' then sack him if he is not satisfied with such report.

Australia's Political Underworld...& their enforcers
The promotion of law and order means money to big business. Profits from insurance, security fixtures, patrol services and the like can only continue to grow if the perceived threat of uncontrollable crime wave escalates. In the past few months there have been many examples of the true nature of our blood thirsty politicians and their sinister attempts to spoon-feed a not so gullible public with their repetitious rhetoric.

Truth
Who is telling the truth? Well I guess Dr. Ed. Chadbourne or Mr. Peter Ryan may have the answer to that. Dr. Chadbourne sacked by Peter Ryan and more specifically in my view because he elected deputy commissioners Dave Madden and Andrew Scipione as the best men in the service in relation to his qualifications to make a recommendation in his capacity as human resources.That is if you believe that a Dr. can be corrupted.

Honesty
What is happening between the Police Service and politics is quite extraordinary at the moment. If stand over tactics don't work tell half the truth honestly and follow the example of sheep. Another word for it is sleaze, yeah. Another word for it is workplace harassment. Another word for it is bribing a Police Officer. Another word for it is misleading Parliament.

Tele Tales
Most people I know don't buy the Daily Telegraph. Why? Because of the lies and propaganda purported by them.

Lord Denning
Interesting how a member of the Police Board Mr. Tim Priest would hold grave fears for his safety from dangerous senior police but fails to name them or have them sacked. Rather Priest resigns as if he had no powers. Could that mean what he was saying is that the Governments are also corrupt?

Corrosive
Clive Small is Bob Carr's choice for the new Police Commissioner. It could only be the case considering his, Small's special appointment into Parliament House. Small who suffers from the little person syndrome is the ideal bend over boy who gets shuffled through his corrupt actions. Rolling the legal system for him after the fact, just like his predecessor Roger the dodger Rogerson.

Black Nexus
The Separation of Powers Doctrine is nowcontaminated witharangeofcolours, now leaving us with a black shirt on a once blue bridge that crossed that thin blue line. The 'Amery and Woodham show'.

Same boat
The Premier, Bob Carr, relies on a militia. A gang of bikies and our Police Service, to show all of us he is no murderer. He should be taken to the task along with his partners in crime like Clive Small to account for those people who like my self have been maliciously assaulted and who have complained, without any service and those who cannot speak for themselves who were murdered, like Terry Falconer. Terry murdered in custody.

Good Cop
Why have our democratic institutions broken down? It's not just the criminal justice system. The Anti-Corruption Network webmaster@anti-corruption-network.org exposes the same issues. A group of white-collar workers who say they have suffered as follows:

Dangerous
I refer to the Daily Telegraph article 22 March 2002 under the heading Priest quits advisory job.

Partners in crime - history!
Roger Rogerson, the old hero, who never faced a result in the Warren Lanfranchi, or Sally-Anne Huckstepp murders, was let off in my opinion when the New South Wales Government rolled the legal system (deciding what evidence to give the police prosecutor) to have the jury believe the illusion they (the Government wanted to create).

Police Chronology 1994-2001
View events in the NSW Police Force since the Wood Royal Commission began in 1994. 1994 May Justice James Wood is appointed Commissioner of the Royal Commission into the NSW Police Service ('WRC').

Friday, January 24, 2003

Politicians, false-flags, Bali, scapegoats, police, heroin: How low can they go?

When all those people dropped dead like flies from heroin overdoses in Sydney because police sold heroin on the streets privately and handed it out during the Wood Royal Commission, there was despair about ordinary Australians of Police corruption.

But you can't call them ordinary, not remembering the funeral services.

Someone told me they [those who spoke at the funerals of victims of the heroin overdoses] were not ordinary. Someone told me they spoke with enormous emotion, breaking down; it was such an emotional, emotional affair. There was no humour in these funerals. They just came out and thought, 'This is a side of Australians who were beat up.

Bob Carr would like to forget about those people who died from heroin because they don't have any political advantage like the Buchan funeral - the last of 11 memorials for Sydney's [CIA false flag] Bali bombing victims - because that will help him shape his political agenda, just fine.

Ideas for an essay on Australian Patriotism that was commissioned last year by the Australia Day Committee and they suit his political aspirations as a nice guy, don't you think?

These ideas are great when he is an arsehole wouldn't you say?

Re-titled Bob Carr: What Australia means to me, the essay has been published by Penguin and will be released on Sunday. Proceeds have been earmarked for the victims and families of the [CIA false flag, and Australian complicity, call to arms,] Bali bombing.

Its not the money it is the politics. [?]He can put his hand in the till for some cash and he doesn't need the proceeds. In any case people will get the right idea about him being genuine, decent, a good person and who donates money to charity. [?]

The Australia Day committee asked him to write his ideas ...[?] those funerals, wouldn't be about heroin deaths now would they? He remembers when he was told about the heroin deaths and thought that there was no political gain and then because he needed a better angle he thought, hey, why not scavenge some other terrible incident?

[The Australia Day Committee asked him? To cover John Howard's arse over Australia's complicity in the USA, CIA, false flag, call to arms, Bali bombing that was meant to bolster support and quell dissent for the Coalition of the Killing's illegal and degrading occupation and genocide of Iraq and Afghanistan.]

John Howard's bungle is just right. Remember when John opened his big mouth telling Bush we'll go to war with you for a trade agreement, no problem. That's when he thought, he could find a sympathetic ear? He just needed to attend the funerals of the Bali bombings. So off he went mobile in hand contacting the media to make sure they were there when he arrived. So off he goes to the Coogee commemoration, there was a blazing sun, he never felt prouder of representing this community.

A man, he had a Dutch name, he wasn't even going to speak, and he was so, so articulate. If he only knew why he was actually there. In his mind, this experience was counterpoised to that of the Olympics at the hight of his corruption... [then] we said, 'Doesn't the city look great? Wasn't it a great opening ceremony? Aren't we doing well?' There was this great, ferocious pride and it was something special. But that is balanced with [CIA false flag] Bali as a unifying experience. That showed the best of our people. [?] From none of these people have I heard anything in the way of vengeance or racism. [Or Australia's complicity in murdering their relatives and friends?] I saw this dignity, this huge, huge dignity.

Carr, who spoke on the subject late last year, said his essay would not dwell on [the CIA false flag] Bali, but instead talk about the humour [laugh?] intrinsic in the Australian character, the nation's values, its heroes, [its war criminals and murderers in Canberra?] what the nation got right, [what the war criminals and murderers got wrong?] and its darker side. He'd talk about his Australian sacred sites, [not genocide of Aboriginals?] and if he had a time machine the episodes in Australian history he would re-visit; talk about his heroes like [Darth Vader would?]

Darth Vader!: NSW citizens 'terrorised'

Bob Carr dubbed Darth Vader, rests over NSW citizens unrestrained like a mushroom cloud. The State Government's repression, deleting the basic tenant of law itself.

Asked about his own sacred sites, he listed the Royal National Park, Old Parliament House, the harbour, and most of all the Police Force and especially my bank account adding: "Now that's five; I have to keep a few secret." [Macquarie bank?]

But Carr is as much a politician as he is a liar. Here's to betting that hidden amid all the talk on the importance of history, the significance of education, the need for an ecologically sustainable population, and a pacey tickling up of a few political truisms, myths, lies and debates, in this, a pre-election climate, this book will contain a fair bit of Labor PR - and a dose of self-congratulation.

By Slimy Mackerel Anti Corruption Editor 24 Jan 03

THE DONKEY: Bob Carr is the super loser of the century because he thinks everyone else is stupid. Warning! What ever you do. Just don't vote for the corrupt Carr Government!

Related:

Hill defends decision to attack Iraq: Step by step?
FEDERAL Defence [War] Minister [Sinister] Robert Hill has defended the government's decision to send troops [ send militia] to the Persian Gulf [ to attack Iraq] in readiness for any [pre-emptive strike that would cause a] conflict with Iraq.

Bin Laden funded Bali attacks?: report
A militant Indonesian Muslim [patsy] who has confessed to involvement in October's bombings on Bali island [but not for a song? In other words he was paid or provoked] says there is a "strong possibility" money from Osama bin Laden was used for the attacks. [But more like money from the USA via the CIA.]

Pleas for peace ring the globe
Anti-war demonstrators turned out in their hundreds of thousands around the world on Saturday to protest against United States military preparations for an invasion of Iraq.

Police ' overdoing their job' in cleric arrest: 'Justice Action'
New South Wales Opposition leader John Brogden says he is disappointed a leading Muslim cleric has described the police action involving him yesterday as "un-Australian".

AUSTRALIA 2002: POLICE STATE LOOMING
As we go to press (December 2002), both the Federal parliament and the NSW parliament are debating legislation that would give police and ASIO agents greater powers of search, interrogation and detention, and significantly erode the fundamental rights of citizens. In both cases, of course, the alleged purpose of the bills is to combat terrorism.

Govt plays down reports of complicity to torture its own citizens
The complicit federal Government says reports there are two highly trained members of Al Qaeda operating in Australia selling GI and are consistent with information it has already released.

Who is bad?
Super Rat? M5? M11? K8? N2? So I trust that some people who, with the photos and guns guessed that a jury would quickly establish a case against a profiled person whom, you just had a picture and a history of. Common knowledge? The government knew their victims would take the blame. Not just chess in court, 'moving around the pieces', but 'putting false evidence, or not enough evidence before the jury."

Parents call for feedback on social skills

Parents are calling for the same level of feedback on their children's social development as on their academic progress, according to a national survey.

Almost a quarter of those polled said they were dissatisfied with the level of information about their child in this area. Just over half of the respondents felt that "values education" was very significant and preferred programs which encouraged personal development and taught social values.

The survey of 2100 respondents by the Australian Scholarships Group (ASG) also found 49 per cent regarded federal funding for school education as inadequate, compared with 38 per cent who felt the same way last year.

ASG, a non-profit organisation that encourages parents to put aside funds for their children's upper secondary or university education, has more than 300,000 members. It surveys people who are most likely to be interested in education issues.

Parents felt the states were doing a better job than the Commonwealth but that both levels of government needed to do more in providing funding.

Respondents felt the Federal Government should assist public schools over private schools.

The Seed

Respect, you only get out what you have put in. What about Life Skills, Communication and Conflict Resolution. Evolution, perhaps some children and adults miss the whole or part of the course. I did, and so how surprised do you think I was when I realised my parents missed the course as well. Things like Compromise, Win Win, Empathy, and Love. Invisible energy and other skills like public speaking, how to Relate, Assuming, Blaming, Forgiveness, Freedom and Discrimination. This is how I learned respect. If you don't know what it is then how do you relate?

By Anti Social Behaviour 24 Jan 03

THE EGG: Before there can be academic development there has to be social development. Otherwise the academic spends the rest of his/her life in jail at the cost of the taxpayer.

Related:

Call to update suicide prevention strategy: study
A four-year study of suicides by people under the age of 18 in New South Wales, has found little difference between rates of suicide in rural and regional areas and cities.

NSW police cracked up on antisocial behaviour
Hundreds of extra police will be on the streets of Sydney from this afternoon as part of a major blitz on crime and activities as "antisocial behaviour" says the ABC online last Fri 24 May 2002.

Alcohol is just the beginning
People who start using alcohol by their mid teens are more than twice as likely as others to experiment with different drugs and to become dependent on drugs a major Australian study has found.

NSW prisons - primary industry bailed up!
In many quiet regional centres around NSW there is a new primary industry shaping up. It has something to do with Bail but not with bales. The minister for Agriculture Richard Amery who also has the prisons portfolio is now committed to farming prisoners.

The Seed
Respect, you only get out what you have put in. What about Life Skills, Communication and Conflict Resolution. Evolution, perhaps some children and adults miss the whole or part of the course. I did, and so how surprised do you think I was when I realised my parents missed the course as well. Things like Compromise, Win Win, Empathy, and Love. Invisible energy and other skills like public speaking, how to Relate, Assuming, Blaming, Forgiveness, Freedom and Discrimination. This is how I learned respect. If you don't know what it is then how do you relate?

Youth Suicide
I would like to suggest firstly that starting at the root in a holistic pattern so that everyone in our community is included and a seed is planted to prevent our youth dying.

The Tree of Dreams
Come make a wish. I know it will come true, it did for me...

Thursday, January 23, 2003

Call to update suicide prevention strategy: study


A four-year study of suicides by people under the age of 18 in New South Wales, has found little difference between rates of suicide in rural and regional areas and cities.


The report says the suicide prevention strategy must be updated to acknowledge the stress of expectation on students sitting the higher school certification (HSC) is a factor in youth suicide.

But going to war with Iraq and threats by police and the media suggesting we should be alert of something suspicious were not even considered?

Commissioner for Children And Young People Gillian Calvert says another important area to address is to challenge the myth people who say they are going to commit suicide will not actually do it.

"Those young people did go on to commit suicide so we need to challenge that myth in the community and say, if someone is telling you that they are going to commit suicide, take it seriously and seek help," Commissioner Calvert said. "The second aspect of that is that the kids often told other kids but made them promise that they wouldn't tell - it's the one promise that you should break."

Lucky Door Prize

Close your eyes.

What can you see?
Nothing?
So without you there is no beauty.
Then Repeat After Me!
You're nearly as good-looking as I am!
Go on tell your friends..You're nearly as good looking as I am.
Because I am special to me and everyone else is equal to me.

LUCKY!

By Psych Ology 23 Jan 03

THE EGG: War is stress. In an otherwise difficult time children want to see a future. Add the burden of war and that may be too much for them? Teaching children to solve problems instead of solving problems for them is another way to prevent them giving up on life too easily.

Related:

The punishment: Is the 'crime'
The punishment is the crime according to retired chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia Justice Alistair Nicholson. "Smacking a child ought to be seen as assault".

The Seed
Respect, you only get out what you have put in. What about Life Skills, Communication and Conflict Resolution. Evolution, perhaps some children and adults miss the whole or part of the course. I did, and so how surprised do you think I was when I realised my parents missed the course as well. Things like Compromise, Win Win, Empathy, and Love. Invisible energy and other skills like public speaking, how to Relate, Assuming, Blaming, Forgiveness, Freedom and Discrimination. This is how I learned respect. If you don't know what it is then how do you relate?

Youth Suicide
I would like to suggest firstly that starting at the root in a holistic pattern so that everyone in our community is included and a seed is planted to prevent our youth dying.

The Tree of Dreams
Come make a wish. I know it will come true, it did for me...

Alcohol is just the beginning

People who start using alcohol by their mid teens are more than twice as likely as others to experiment with different drugs and to become dependent on drugs a major Australian study has found.

The research, which fuels growing concern about alcohol-related harm, is the latest to consider the contentious question of whether alcohol is a "gateway" to hard drug use.

Previous research has been criticised for not taking account of different social backgrounds or genetic factors.

But Cliff Beer, from the Mad Mans Broth Institute of Medical Research, studied all the drunks who had tried alcohol before age 17 and the others drunks who had not.

He said, the drunks, who had drug histories, could be compared fairly.

The study found early alcohol users were twice as likely as their siblings to become dependent on Valium or any other drug by about 30, 2 times as likely to have used cigarettes and at least four times as likely to have used heroine, cocaine, amphetamines and hallucinogens such as LSD and cannabis herbs.

Dr Beer, a senior research fellow, said it was possible but unproven that alcohol use in the early teens changed the brain, making it crave drugs. Alcohol users might be tempted to experiment more widely because their drug experience was enjoyable.

Health programs were needed to "prevent escalation to use of other drugs among young people ... at risk because of their early initiation of alcohol use", Dr Beer writes in the Journal of the Human Medical Association.

The information officer for the Justice and Alcohol Research Centre, Paul Valium, said it was clear alcohol was not a "benign drug". But he was concerned that hardline drug-control advocates would use the findings to suggest trying alcohol would not inevitably lead to hard drug use, which was untrue.

Dr Government Tax, director of the Alcohol Service in Parliament House Canberra, said he was not convinced by Dr Beer's findings, which were at odds with a report by the Institute of Medicine in the US. The study had not considered that other drugs had been tried before the alcohol.

By Legal Drugs Medical Writer 23 Jan 03

Tobacco, alcohol top the drug abuse toll
Tobacco and alcohol accounted for 83 per cent of the cost of drug abuse in Australia, dwarfing the financial impact of illegal drugs, a Commonwealth Government report has found.

NSW police cracked up on antisocial behaviour
Hundreds of extra police will be on the streets of Sydney from this afternoon as part of a major blitz on crime and activities as "antisocial behaviour" says the ABC online last Fri 24 May 2002.

Alcohol pickles your brain
The only two social drugs the Government sanction are cigarettes and alcohol as legal, yet they cause the most damage." He said.

Carr needs damning over bushfire prevention plans: 'Critics'

New South Wales Premier Bob Carr needs damning over bushfire prevention plans. What we need is Special Powers for the fire brigade and more money for resources instead of wasting public money on anti-terror police.

Bob Carr is hell bent on the fact that he can do no wrong and he is tunnel visioned.

Australia is prepared for war with Iraq but not prepared for fire in Australia?

Police have superpowers above the law and over 500 hundred people have no place to live because their houses burnt down.

Priorities?


Where did the bomb go off in Australia?

Where are the terrorists the police caught after they raided Muslim houses?

There have been fires that have burnt down people, property, stock and infrastructure.

Those people used the resources they had to fight these fires if any at all.

The army wasn't called in because they were too busy preparing for war on Iraq.

Critics say the Carr Government contributed to the bushfire situation. The Opposition and a number of Federal MPs have attacked the Carr Government over its hazard reduction strategies.


By Koala Bear 23 Jan 03

Related:

Carr rejects fire preparation criticism
New South Wales Premier Bob Carr has rejected claims that more could have been done to prevent the fires burning across the south-east of the state and the ACT.

WARNING BELLS FOR AUSTRALIA!
Is this a message from the Universe? Australia is prepared for war with Iraq, but not prepared for fire on home soil. Canberra is still counting the cost of Saturday's devastating fires and preparing for another onslaught if conditions worsen during the week.