"The long-delayed imperative
for tax reform has arrived and will be pivotal in making or breaking the
Albanese government.
Chalmers has spelled out
the news – NDIS spending is growing by 12.1 per cent yearly, hospital funding
by 6.1 per cent, aged care by 5 per cent, defence spending by 4.4 per cent,
while higher interest rates mean interest payments will grow about 14 per cent
a year over the next four years. The nation’s social and security contract has
expanded – but the policy consequences and financing have not been addressed.
That is going to be Labor’s destiny."
The Australian federal government seeks to break a firm commitment made multiple times before the election, deceitfully claiming that conditions differ from when the commitment was made.This political "bait and switch" is all too common among our political parties and has resulted in low trust in our politicians and government processes.Australia urgently needs to match public spending to the community's willingness to be taxed. We also need to change our tax mix to lower the burden placed on everyday wage and salary earners.Citizens must be broadly and transparently included in this process for a successful outcome.
Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen has created a new platform - Beyond the Screen, to develop educational training regimens for people building social media tools. “We need a world where we have 10 million people who can have a meaningful conversation on how you design social media.”...READ THE ARTICLEhttps://bit.ly/3Cqoegj...HAUGEN'S TESTIMONYhttps://bit.ly/3LZ0hzS...ACCC PLATFORMS INQUIRYhttps://bit.ly/3dTl8Is
“Major political parties operate
sophisticated voter-tracking software without the consent of voters and their
databases contain enormous amounts of personal information about all of us….
While our politicians might think
it’s no big deal to build profiles of voters without their consent and without
accountability and accuracy safeguards, the fact such databases are routinely
consulted before appointments are made to government boards, for example,
highlights another part of the problem: an effective hollowing out of the
principle of the secret ballot.”
Professor Peter van Onselen, The
Australian 1/10/22