Monday 2 July 2012

Well what did he expect of a party under the leadership of the likes of Tony Abbott?


This looks like a Stalinist operation really where everyone gets up and hails the party leader.”

{Clive Palmer on ABC News AM 3oth June 2012}

Sunday 1 July 2012

It's past the July 1 witching hour and Whyalla still lives!


Whyalla webcams as the midnight hour comes and passes without life in this steel town being extinguished by the 1 July 2012 introduction of a national price on carbon.
Click in images to enlarge

Update:

Post-Armageddon x 8 Hours 22 minutes and the sun is out in Whyalla!

Fairfax Manoeuvrings: Whose over-inflated sense of entitlement is operating here?



A statement which makes me wonder whose sense of entitlement has led to
Ms. Rinehart’s demand for three board seats and a degree of editorial control.


It would seem that her personal sense of entitlement is based on the immense wealth she garners from family mining interests which makes her the country’s
richest person.
However, it is less clear what she actually contributes to either the common good or national life.

According to Australian Tax Office Taxation Statistics 2009-10 there were 5,395 individuals, 4,285 companies, 518 partnerships and 931 trusts involved in the mining industry.


The mining industry had a combined tax liability in that financial year of a mere $4,168 million on a total assessable income of $139,593 million. Companies in this sector represented 6.3 per cent of the tax liabilities of all corporations operating in Australia.


To put that into perspective, in 2009-10 manufacturing companies had a tax liability of $23,235 million on a total assessable income of $265,687 million. Companies in this sector represented 12 per cent of the tax liabilities of all corporations operating in Australia.


Even our Northern Rivers retailers belong to a national industry group which has a taxation burden which is more than double that of the mining sector.


Finally, in the 2009-10 financial year 3,138 out of the 4,285 companies in the mining industry paid no tax at all.


So the mining industry remains the national industry sector with the highest percentage of tax exempt companies. A feat it manages due to the high number of tax deductions, rebates, concessions, exemptions, offsets etc. available to mining interests – including tax deductions available on any state royalties payable.


Whilst, as ever, the vast majority of taxation being paid to the Commonwealth still comes from the pockets of salary and wage earners.

Well B*gger Me Dead! It's the 1st of July 2012 and the sky hasn't fallen



The sun rose this morning to the melodic sound of a Northern Rivers dawn chorus, so I’m dedicating this to Tony Chicken Little Abbott who told me my world would end when the Australian Government put a price on carbon and introduced a mineral resource tax today.
This one’s for you mate!

Thanks to Clarencegirl for help with posting probs on this one!