Tuesday 16-06-2026 4:05am

Donald Trump rebukes Jerusalem as Tehran cancels flights over western Iran, threatening to pull out of talks and retaliate after Israeli military strikes in Beirut

Big spend — little yield

Labor's Capacity Investment Scheme has delivered just one operational renewable energy project ∼ a small solar farm in Victoria producing 46 megawatts of power ∼ casting fresh doubt on whether Anthony Albanese will meet his target of 82% renewable electricity by 2030 Rosie Lewis points out in this morning's Oz. Government officials have also revealed that of the 94 projects announced and funded under the CIS, which had its first auction in 2023, 35 were under contract and had just reached a final investment decision. Confirmation the government's flagship scheme to supercharge renewable investment has produced one completed project so far comes as Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen travelled to Germany to lead negotiations at the Bonn climate change conference, where he backed a global electrification target. With Mr Bowen also chief negotiator at this year's UN climate change conference, COP31, the Coalition seized on the lack of completed CIS projects, saying it "should be ringing alarm bells" Of the nearly 100 projects underwritten by the CIS, 31 were "challenging" wind projects due to generate 13.7GW of energy. Four CIS projects have sought additional underwriting from the government after experiencing "challenges". The revelations were made at the latest round of Senate estimates hearings at the end of May, when the Clean Energy Council confirmed the level of green energy generation reaching financial closure had plunged to a decade low.


 SPORT:

Tigers took a bit of a mauling while Olympic swimmers pay for medals

Benji’s Tigers took a while but they eventually won 36-28 against the Titans in the NRL while in the AFL unfortunately GWS could not do the same against St Kilda going down 88-96. In the other AFL game Brisbane came out on to Richmond 115-80. [click to read more]

In the World game Germany walked all over Curacao 7-1 and the Netherlands are 0-0 against Japan. Also on today is the Ivory Coast playing Ecuador and Sweden against Tunisia.

Tomorrow the Kiwis take to the field against Iran, Belgium against Egypt, Spain against Cabo Verde and Saudi Arabia against Uruguay.

According to Tyler Lewis in the Oz this morning a maiden one-day international century from Cooper Connolly guided Australia to a nail-biting cricket victory over Bangladesh at Shere Bangla National Stadium.

Chasing Bangladesh’s 5-274; Australia narrowly avoided a catastrophic capitulation and series whitewash around Connolly’s 149 from 134 balls.

Connolly took the Aussies within nine runs of the target with a hat-trick of sixes in the 45th over before the Tigers captured 4-5 to force the game into the final over.

The sharp southpaw built his innings on offside flamboyance and brought up his breakthrough ton with a composed straight drive.

Connolly reached the triple-figure milestone — his first at international, List A and first-class level - off just 87 deliveries.

Meanwhile, Abisha Sapkota also in the Ozreveals Kyle Chalmers has made the startling revelation that it has cost him more than $5000 just to swim his way onto the Australian team to highlight the sobering reality that even elite swimmers are not set up for life despite becoming Olympic heroes.

At 28, Chalmers admitted he is facing difficulties within a sport that offers very little reward compared to the sacrifices made.

Chalmers has spent a decade at the top of world swimming. He shocked the world to win an Olympic gold medal as a teenager in 2016, and has since won gold medals at every major international swim meet.

But gold medals don't pay the bills and Chalmers, like many swimmers, is furious that IOC president Kirsty Coventry has rejected the idea of paying athletes.

It’s really sad to see how uneven it is, especially when an IOC president comes out and makes pretty harsh comments through that period of time, Chalmers said.

It’s very easy for a lot of us swimmers to voice our concerns at times, but nothing seems to change.

There’s millions of dollars being left in bank accounts where people are using our image and our performances and we don't reap the rewards.

It goes for not only the IOC but right down.

As a 28-year-old with a young family and a mortgage, it’s very hard to continue.

We fund these things ourselves. For me to come to trials, it cost me $5000. For me to race tonight, it cost me $36. It’s a sport that takes a lot from you. [click the intro to return other stories]


 STOCKMARKET:

All eyes on the options market on Tuesday

Investors will soon get a new way to bet on SpaceX’s (SPCX.O), opens new tab trajectory: options on the stock are set to begin trading as soon as Tuesday, with early activity expected to be heavy, volatile, and likely expensive, Reuters reports on today's website. [click to continue reading]

Options on Elon Musk’s rocket and spacecraft manufacturer will follow its record trading debut on Friday, when shares jumped more than 25%, pushing its valuation above $2 trillion as investors piled in to bet on the sprawling empire, which spans rockets to AI.

Options exchange Cboe Global Markets expects options to start trading Tuesday, a spokesperson said. Market participants expect a broad mix of investors to likely enter once options begin trading, from shareholders seeking downside protection to traders positioning for volatility in the stock.

I expect explosive demand, said Ophir Gottlieb, chief executive of Capital Market Laboratories. The largest IPO ever attached to one of the most controversial founders ever, pursuing what might be one of the most ambitious long-term goals ever, will equally generate some of the largest initial option volume in dollars ever.

Options, which give holders the right but not the obligation to buy or sell shares at a predetermined price within a certain period, offer investors a low-cost way to gain exposure to a company’s stock and to express their views on short-term price moves and longer-term positioning.

They usually list within days of the stock’s debut. SpaceX opened at $150 on Friday, up from its $135 IPO price, and was trading around $172 in afternoon activity, making it the sixth-largest U.S. company by market value at more than $2 trillion.

If SpaceX behaves anything like the shares of Elon Musk’s electric vehicle company Tesla, it will be more volatile than the average stock, driving options activity.

Tesla’s five-year beta — a measure of volatility — is 1.81, according to LSEG data, where a reading of 1 means a stock’s volatility is in line with the market.

I think we're going to see a lot of volatility in the underlying stock, said Seth Hickle, chief investment officer at Mindset Wealth Management, adding that implied volatility in options could be very high.

Investors expect activity to build around key events, including the company’s first quarterly report as a public entity and potential major equity index inclusions. Nasdaq has already adjusted its rules to ease SpaceX’s entry into the Nasdaq 100. MSCI said it will apply early inclusion rules for large IPOs, while S&P Global has ruled out fast-track inclusion into the broad-market S&P 500.

We have been asked the question, 'What day will the options be listed' more times than any IPO I can remember, said Chris Murphy, co-head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna, a market maker.

Skeptics can also use options to express bearish views without the risk of shorting SpaceX shares outright, although it will not be cheap.

With a short, your risk is theoretically unlimited, your borrow costs can be punishing and in a thin float like SPCX’s, a short squeeze can wipe you out before you're ever proven right on the fundamentals, said Luke Lango, chief technology analyst at financial research firm InvestorPlace.

[click the intro to return other stories]

 NEWS:

📜 Gina circles
regional
newspapers

Billionaire Gina Rinehart has held discussions about buying Australian Community Media, the regional newspaper and media outfit owned by Alex Waislitz and Anthony Catalano The Australian today's website. [click to read more]

The potential move, described as preliminary by sources and one that has so far been rebuffed, is the latest sign of Mrs Rinehart’s growing interest in the media sector.

The Australian understands representatives of Mrs Rinehart and her Hancock Prospecting held talks with ACM owners in recent months, though the discussions have so far not progressed further.

ACM has been owned since 2019 by billionaire investor Mr Waislitz and his business partner, Mr Catalano, who was charged with eight criminal offences relating to his alleged assault of his wife, Stefanie Catalano, in Melbourne in March.

ACM’s assets include newspapers such as The Canberra Times, Illawarra Mercury and Newcastle Herald.

Mr Waislitz and Mr Catalano, who has stepped down as a director of the holding company that owns their media assets, also have a 30% shareholding in View Media Group, real estate assets and interests in a number of companies that are leveraging ACM’s audience reach and real estate media exposures.

The duo also owns a 7.53% stake in the ASX-listed Southern Cross Media, now the owner of the Seven television network and Western Australian Newspapers, which counts billionaire Kerry Stokes as its biggest shareholder.

Southern Cross Media’s second biggest shareholder is now former Seven commercial director Bruce McWilliam, who has spent $26m on Southern Cross shares in the past two months - a spending spree funded by Mrs Rinehart and entities connected to the mining magnate.

Mrs Rinehart’s spokesman would not comment when approached by The Australian.

In response to questions, Mr Waislitz said: In recent times we have been approached by interested parties but we are more than happy to hold and continue to support the business.

He said the ACM investment has proven to be excellent in the past seven years and while traditional media had its challenges, Mr Waislitz said ACM had consistently performed under the leadership of managing director Tony Kendall and his management team.

ACM is Australia’s leading regional and rural digital media company that services over 5.3 million people on a monthly basis, Mr Waislitz said in a statement.

It is also the largest employer of journalists in regional and rural Australia and enjoys a position of trust with both its readers and advertisers.

Mr Waislitz backed Mr McWilliam’s shareholding in Southern Cross Media, and the latter’s potential tilt for a board role ∼ and even the chairmanship ∼ at the company.

Mr McWilliam is likely to seek up to 20% of Southern Cross Media’s shares, a strategy that would likely be funded by Mrs Rinehart.

Ranked No 1 on this year’s edition of The List — Australia’s Richest 250 when it was published by The Australian in March, Mrs Rinehart has most of her estimated $41.66bln fortune held in iron ore mining assets owned by Hancock Prospecting.

Hancock also has a $5bln share portfolio, comprising mostly mining stocks but also with some media investments.

There is an almost $100m holding in Fox Corp, the owner of the Fox News cable network and Fox Sports networks in the US, and Hancock Prospecting also owns shares in the Nasdaq-listed Trump Media & Technology Group. [click the intro to return to front page]




 LOCAL CHATTER:
The Maverettes were not successful in Singleton going down a respectable 8-4 yesterday afternoon.
♦♦♦♦
The Mavericks [local mens football (NRL) team] were clipped at the post on Saturday loosing to Aberdeen at Aberdeen 18-20.
♦♦♦♦

 NEWS:

📢 Business
bodies join
in revolt

The nation’s peak business groups are set to sink the boot into the Albanese government’s capital gains tax reforms, declaring the shock changes announced in the federal budget will discourage investment when Australia needs it most, the Daily Telegraph reports today. [click to read the rest of the story].

The Council of Small Business Organisations Australia (COSBOA), Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI), Australian Industry Group and Business Council of Australia (BCA) joined forces in a bid to warn federal parliament not to green light the reforms to be rolled out across Australian businesses when they appear at day one of a Senate inquiry on Monday.

We, Australia’s peak business groups representing businesses of all sizes that employ millions of Australians, strongly oppose the federal government’s proposed capital gains tax changes and call on the parliament to reject the rushed legislation, which will discourage investment at a time when Australia needs it most, the groups said in a joint statement.

At a time of growing global competition, Australia cannot afford policies that make us a less attractive investment destination.

The bodies forecast the changes, if passed, would affect businesses of every size, from companies investing in major projects to small and family-run businesses seeking to grow, create jobs and support their local communities.

With the changes not set to come into effect until 1 July 2027, there is no reason to rush reforms of this significance, the joint statement reads.

The speed of this process raises serious concerns about whether any genuine economic impact analysis has been conducted.

We cannot risk ad hoc changes and the unintended consequences they bring across the economy, the statement reads.

Business Council chief executive Bran Black argued the rushed attempt at tax reform will not lift living standards or strengthen economic growth.

The government has chosen policies that simply do not grow the pie, he said.

Good reform encourages investment and rewards risk-taking. These changes move Australia in the opposite direction and will make it harder to attract the capital needed to grow the economy.

Council of Small Business Organisations Australia boss Skye Cappuccio said proposed changes will reset the risk and reward equation for many small business owners, and many are already telling us they may need to rethink plans to invest in and grow their business. [click the intro to return other stories]




🎠 Drive on
for train
to Cessnock

The NSW Nationals have endorsed the reinstatement of the passenger train service to Cessnock, putting more pressure on the government to act on the issue reports Newcastle Herald website today reports. [click to read more]

A motion put to the party’s annual conference in Albury last week said Cessnock was one of the state’s fastest-growing regional centres.

Yet outside a bus service — or for those who wish to risk a very expensive Uber ride — there is no other form of public transport to service the needs of over 70,000 residents, the motion said.

The area’s population is expected to reach 115,000 people by 2046.

It is anticipated that a train service will be on par with driving, taking less than an hour for people to get into Newcastle, the motion said.

A train to Cessnock will be a competitive game changer, especially for regional youth.

The powerful Rail, Tram and Bus Union will also put a motion to next month’s state Labor Party conference calling on the government to commit to reintroducing passenger services on the line.

The push to bring back a passenger train service to Cessnock is likely to feature prominently in next year’s state election.

Reintroducing passenger train services to the South Maitland Rail Corridor at an estimated cost of $200 million was recently described during an Engineers Australia forum as the best value rail project in Australia".

Bill Palazzi, one of the organisers of the Train to Cessnock community campaign, told the forum that a regular Coalfield passenger service would serve more than 65,000 people and form the spine of an integrated regional transport network. [click the intro to return to front page]





🎂 A
birthday
wish?

A deal to end the war between Iran and the United States has been reached, Donald Trump has confirmed, reports the news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

The United States and Iran have reached a peace deal, and President Donald Trump has ordered the immediate removal of his country’s military blockade.

Mr Trump confirmed the agreement had been struck on social media this morning.

The Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete. Congratulations to all! the President said.

I hereby fully authorise the toll free opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and, simultaneously herewith, authorise the immediate removal of the United States Naval blockade. Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow! President DONALD J. TRUMP.

His post came a few minutes after Pakistan, which had been mediating between the US and Iran, announced the development.

Meanwhile, Mr Turmp is preparing to host a UFC fight on the lawn of the White House to mark both his country’s 250th birthday and his own 80th birthday. [click the intro to return to front page]





😕 Generation
X are
not happy

Australians in their 40s and 50s are struggling with low wages growth, rising inequality and falling rates of home ownership — and many are feeling left behind reports The Guardian website. [click to read the rest of the story].

While the economy overall has largely sailed unscathed through a turbulent 21st century, compounding crises have left a deep scar on a growing number of households.

And instead of being powered by disgruntled younger folk thirsty for change, the driving force has been a generation that has mostly sailed quietly through the recent decades of compounding crises.

Stereotypically disengaged from politics and reluctant to make a scene, generation X are now mostly in their 50s and are finally making themselves heard.

And they are not happy.

One Nation’s ascent over the past year is nothing short of extraordinary. The party scored 6.4% of the primary vote at the May 2025 election. By October the party’s primary vote had notionally doubled to 13%, according to the Essential poll.

One Nation’s popularity has since doubled again to now sit at 28% — only one point behind Labor.

The grievances that have driven voters towards One Nation have coalesced among people in their 50s, where support peaks at 43% among gen Xers, according to polling by Redbridge.

Experts refer to gen X as the sandwich generation, having to provide for older parents and younger children. They face a swathe of economic challenges including far lower home ownership, watching the rich get richer as they struggle with low wages growth that has many feeling left behind.

It’s this environment, the unique issues stretching people in their 40s and 50s, which experts say could be driving gen Xers towards what once were the fringes of politics.

Wesley Jasper doesn't need to think about it. Ask him why he intends to vote for One Nation, he says the economy.

100% the economy, he says. “Where does my money go in taxes and how does that benefit me?

And living standards. What can we do for people like me who've worked hard my whole life? Let’s raise the living standards a bit, shall we, or let’s improve standards for people who choose to go out and do the right thing.

Jasper had a long career in the military and now works for a government organisation. He and his partner wanted to bring their kids up in Canberra; they love everything about it but have just moved back to Ballarat because it’s more affordable.

The wife and I, [in the] last 10, 15 years or so, we both came out of previous relationships, he says. We were living and working in Canberra, so we were trying to pay high rent and that sort of stuff. We both kind of lost everything.

So we scraped and we saved, and we came back to Ballarat because financially it made sense, so we are new mortgage holders. [click the intro to return to front page]




 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
It was always going to come to this. The big AUKUS dismount, led by the political left, and allowed to happen by a Prime Minister who has been one of its most loyal foot-soldiers, even when he has tried to pretend otherwise so as not to spook voters in election campaigns, writes Peta Credlin in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

For much of his adult life, the Prime Minister has been a hard left activist. And now that the once dominant Labor Right faction is all but dead, and the party itself is a wholly owned subsidiary of the hard left ∼ and all the socialist, Marxist madness that comes with that ∼ we were always going to get to a place where the Prime Minister would say all the right things about the defence of our nation and, in particular, Labor’s support for a nuclear-powered submarine fleet but it would eventually be exposed as yet another Albanese lie.

Because Albanese’s heart has never been in AUKUS, and it was obvious, it has always been obvious, that the longer Labor was left in charge, the more it would be watered down over time.

Enter former Labor cabinet minister Ed Husic this week, alongside a very telling group of fellow left-wing travellers, to demand that Australia must rethink its commitment to AUKUS, and to nuclear submarines in particular. And in a real challenge to Albanese’s authority, Husic is demanding a new caucus vote on the AUKUS agreement.

No accidental timing

This timing is not accidental. Next month, in late July, the ALP National Conference will be held in Melbourne. Out of this conference will come the next Labor platform, and what’s in it will be binding on all members and MPs.

Already there is disquiet about AUKUS, and with the Left faction now in control of the delegate numbers, Husic’s push is ominous.

There are two key drivers behind the push to dismantle AUKUS. The first is that modern Labor does not believe in a defence force where our military gets deployed to defend our values, where the legal use of lethal force is a primary purpose for its existence, and where alliances matter. On defence, Labor is weak. They think our defence force is a humanitarian aid body, a smarter-dressed version of the State Emergency Service, to be deployed to natural disasters but otherwise kept out of harm’s way lest the ADF’s chronic underfunding be exposed.

And the other thing behind Labor’s aversion to AUKUS is that hard heads know a nuclear-powered submarine program in this country will require a nuclear industry to sustain it. And the lack of homegrown nuclear competence has long been a key argument against the development of a nuclear power industry for Australia. Well, not anymore, once the first nuclear subs arrive — because the small modular reactors that could be the mainstay of a future nuclear power grid are virtually the same reactor type as that which powers a nuclear submarine.

Nuclear power a staller

Meaning, that once we have nuclear subs here, we have the ready potential for nuclear power in terms of local engineers and physicists regardless of whether or not we maintain the fiction of Australia’s nuclear power ban.

That’s the reality. And that is what’s driving the move by Husic and others; and it’s the others who demonstrate just how serious this anti-AUKUS revolt really is. Front and centre in Canberra was former minister (and Albanese mate) the Midnight Oil frontman, Peter Garrett — who cut his political teeth on nuclear disarmament in the '70s and '80s.

Alongside him was Fremantle MP, Josh Wilson, who represents the seat where one of these nuclear submarine bases will go and who almost lost his seat last year, as well as a key left-wing union boss. Garrett also has the support of former PM Paul Keating.

So, let’s pull this apart. Labor’s lack of seriousness about defence is self-evident in the recent budget. They have cooked the books by including in the headline defence spending figure more than $10bln in veterans' welfare payments and $2bln in funding for intelligence agencies.

Strategically, too, look at the lip service this government has paid to our allies. Look at how we rolled over on Palestine in the UN, and our repeated failure to provide any support into the Middle East, even where our interests in fossil fuels are at risk.

Albanese would never be the sort of leader prepared to deploy our troops even where our national interest is at stake because, essentially, the left regards the warfighting and killing that is at the core of what a defence force exists to do as somehow illegitimate, certainly uncomfortable.

Secretly changing definitions

They are embarrassed that this is the job of our soldiers and nothing shows that more than the way the Albanese government secretly changed the definition of a war crime before they went out and charged one of our most decorated war heroes.

Speaking alongside Husic in Canberra was former admiral Chris Barrie, who is set to front the independent community-led AUKUS inquiry. And on the rise of China, he basically conceded that Beijing will soon dominate the world so we all better adjust to that reality.

Since when has this nation built on Anzacs become surrender monkeys? We have an alliance called AUKUS because it is a two-way street and it ceases to be a two-way street if we expect the United States to hold up their end while we do not hold up ours.

Labor doesn't like defence and is terrified that nuclear subs will mean nuclear power. Because nuclear power means the end of the net-zero gravy train. Because it has always been about the billions in subsidies. It was never about saving the planet or lowering emissions; it’s just been a way to rebrand unpopular foreign aid and keep the grifting in place.

So, watch the PM very closely — that’s my tip. He will pretend he’s still backing AUKUS but he will let the sabotage continue. And it will all come to a head at Labor’s National Conference next month.

The big AUKUS dismount

It was always going to come to this. The big AUKUS dismount, led by the political left and allowed to happen by a Prime Minister who has been one of its most loyal foot-soldiers, even when he has tried to pretend otherwise so as not to spook voters in election campaigns.

For much of his adult life, the Prime Minister has been a hard left activist. And now that the once dominant Labor Right faction is all but dead, and the party itself is a wholly owned subsidiary of the hard left ∼ and all the socialist, Marxist madness that comes with that ∼ we were always going to get to a place where the Prime Minister would say all the right things about the defence of our nation and, in particular, Labor’s support for a nuclear-powered submarine fleet but it would eventually be exposed as yet another Albanese lie.

Because Albanese’s heart has never been in AUKUS and it was obvious, it has always been obvious, that the longer Labor was left in charge, the more it would be watered down over time.

Enter former Labor cabinet minister Ed Husic this week, alongside a very telling group of fellow left-wing travellers, to demand that Australia must rethink its commitment to AUKUS, and to nuclear submarines in particular. And in a real challenge to Albanese’s authority, Husic is demanding a new caucus vote on the AUKUS agreement.

Nothing accidental in this

This timing is not accidental. Next month, in late July, the ALP National Conference will be held in Melbourne. Out of this conference will come the next Labor platform, and what’s in it will be binding on all members and MPs.

Already there is disquiet about AUKUS and with the Left faction now in control of the delegate numbers, Husic’s push is ominous.

There are two key drivers behind the push to dismantle AUKUS. The first is that modern Labor does not believe in a defence force where our military gets deployed to defend our values, where the legal use of lethal force is a primary purpose for its existence and where alliances matter.

On defence, Labor is weak. They think our defence force is a humanitarian aid body, a smarter-dressed version of the State Emergency Service, to be deployed to natural disasters but otherwise kept out of harm’s way lest the ADF’s chronic underfunding be exposed.

And the other thing behind Labor’s aversion to AUKUS is that hard heads know a nuclear-powered submarine program in this country will require a nuclear industry to sustain it. And the lack of homegrown nuclear competence has long been a key argument against the development of a nuclear power industry for Australia.

Well, not anymore, once the first nuclear subs arrive — because the small modular reactors that could be the mainstay of a future nuclear power grid are virtually the same reactor type as that which powers a nuclear -submarine.

The reality is nuclear power

Meaning that once we have nuclear subs here, we have the ready potential for nuclear power in terms of local engineers and physicists regardless of whether or not we maintain the fiction of Australia’s nuclear power ban.

That’s the reality. And that is what’s driving the move by Husic and others; and it’s the others who demonstrate just how serious this anti-AUKUS revolt really is. Front and centre in Canberra was former minister (and Albanese mate) the Midnight Oil frontman, Peter Garrett - who cut his political teeth on nuclear disarmament in the '70s and '80s.

Alongside him was Fremantle MP, Josh Wilson, who represents the seat where one of these nuclear submarine bases will go, and who almost lost his seat last year, as well as a key left-wing union boss. Garrett also has the support of former PM Paul Keating.

So, let’s pull this apart. Labor’s lack of seriousness about defence is self-evident in the recent budget. They have cooked the books by including in the headline defence spending figure more than $10bn in veterans' welfare payments and $2bn in funding for intelligence agencies.

No support for Middle East

Strategically, too, look at the lip service this government has paid to our allies. Look at how we rolled over on Palestine in the UN and our repeated failure to provide any support into the Middle East, even where our interests in fossil fuels are at risk.

Albanese would never be the sort of leader prepared to deploy our troops even where our national interest is at stake because, essentially, the left regards the warfighting and killing that is at the core of what a defence force exists to do as somehow illegitimate, certainly uncomfortable.

They are embarrassed that this is the job of our soldiers, and nothing shows that more than the way the Albanese government secretly changed the definition of a war crime before they went out and charged one of our most decorated war heroes.

Speaking alongside Husic in Canberra was former admiral Chris Barrie, who is set to front the independent community-led AUKUS inquiry. And on the rise of China, he basically conceded that Beijing will soon dominate the world so we all better adjust to that reality.

Surrender monkeys

Since when has this nation built on Anzacs become surrender monkeys? We have an alliance called AUKUS because it is a two-way street and it ceases to be a two-way street if we expect the United States to hold up their end while we do not hold up ours.

Labor doesn't like defence and is terrified that nuclear subs will mean nuclear power. Because nuclear power means the end of the net-zero gravy train. Because it has always been about the billions in subsidies. It was never about saving the planet or lowering emissions; it’s just been a way to rebrand unpopular foreign aid and keep the grifting in place.

So, watch the PM very closely ⏼ that’s my tip. He will pretend he’s still backing AUKUS but he will let the sabotage continue. And it will all come to a head at Labor’s National Conference next month. p class="texthang">


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
Few ideas have spread more rapidly through elite institutions than the claim that gender is not anchored in biological reality but is socially constructed and infinitely fluid. Confined at first to obscure graduate seminars, it was taken up by activists, absorbed by bureaucracies, and soon translated into law — including Julia Gillard’s 2013 decision to write gender identity, untethered from biological sex, into the Sex Discrimination Act 1984, Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

Remarkably uncontroversial then, that decision now produces titanic courtroom battles, the most recent being Tickle v Giggle for Girls. Despite the case’s name, there is nothing in the decision to laugh about, and it is worth asking where this strange idea came from.

Gender theory has many precursors but no individual did more to build its intellectual architecture than American philosopher Judith Butler.

Jargon and assumptions

Butler’s arguments are wrapped in jargon that conceals layers of unstated assumptions and conceptual shortcuts. But that hasn't stopped progressives treating them not as theories to be tested but as moral truths to be enforced. Yet descend into the machinery and the theory looks far less coherent and far more dependent on misrepresentations, than its influence would suggest.

Butler’s starting point is French historian Michel Foucault, whose central claim was that power does not primarily forbid; it produces. It does not repress a pre-existing nature; it manufactures the very categories ∼ the madman, the delinquent, the homosexual ∼ that it then appears merely to describe. On this view, there is no stable essence beneath social forms, no self that precedes the systems that classify it.

Butler radicalises this: just as there is no stable nature beneath identity, so there is no fixed sex beneath gender.

Problem unresolved

But Foucault left a problem unresolved. He claimed that discourse produces subjects yet could never explain quite how. Butler fills that gap by appropriating three vastly influential thinkers: Oxford philosopher JL Austin, French philosopher Jacques Derrida and psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. On closer examination, the work of each turns out to have been seriously distorted in the process.

From Austin, Butler takes the performative: an utterance that brings something into being rather than merely describing it. Gender, she argues, is performative in just this sense — not the expression of an underlying reality but an identity produced through repeated acts and assertions.

But Austin’s whole point was that a performative is not magic. I now pronounce you man and wife can effect a marriage; it only works, however, because an institutional reality stands behind the words: an authorised celebrant, a legal framework, two eligible parties. Remove those conditions, Austin said, and the utterance misfires

No co-operation

.

That word is the crucial bit. For Austin a performative can fail, and it fails when the world declines to co-operate. The misfire is reality’s veto: the mechanism by which the world says no to impostures. And that is precisely the part Butler cannot afford to keep: her project requires performatives that work miracles, altering reality rather than accepting its dictates.

The misfire must therefore go. But she cannot crudely declare that performatives never fail, and in any case she wants a certain kind of failure — the instability that enables a norm to change spontaneously, much as nature randomly mutates.

So she quietly substitutes one failure for another: she keeps the soft kind, the drift by which innovations emerge, and discards the hard Austinian kind, the misfire, the possibility that they get knocked back. Excise that, and no re-performance can ever be vetoed; gender becomes endlessly revisable.

Mistranslation

Next, Derrida: difficult in French, incomprehensible in translation (and Butler mistranslates him). But the core insight is simple. A word carries no fixed meaning sealed inside it; it means something only because it can be repeated in contexts others understand, including ones its first speaker never imagined: words are words because they can be used in an infinite number of sentences.

Derrida’s name for this property is iterability, and from it Butler takes her opening for subversion: because norms, including gender talk, must be repeated, they can be changed.

But, said Derrida, repeatability cuts both ways. Yes, it lets a hostile term be lifted from its old setting and recharged — that is how queer became a banner rather than an insult. But by the same mechanism anything one says can slip free of one’s control. The instability that permits subversion permits the neutralisation and silencing of aberrant mutations.

Encouragement and suppression

That doesn't suit Butler. She therefore seizes the encouraging half of this argument and suppresses the other. She thereby converts Derrida’s explicitly double-edged account into a one-way mechanism that invariably yields liberation. Mutations always arrive at her preferred destination - which is another initial added to the seemingly endless LGBTQI++.

Finally, Lacan: even more aphoristic, in translation like wrestling in mud. From him Butler takes the idea that the self is constituted from outside, by means of language, symbols and the demands of others, not from an autonomous inner essence.

However, for Lacan, that process is never free self-invention. It occurs through what he calls a cut or bar: a prohibition, a founding no imposed by social norms (or, as he terms it, the symbolic order). One becomes a subject by being constrained —the self acquires shape through limitation, much as a fence defines a territory by what it shuts out. Constitution and constraint are inseparable; the subject is barred all the way down, and the limits give the self its continuity, durability and substance.

Identity fabricates

Here too Butler retains one half, the self constituted from outside, and erases the Lacanian constraint: the prohibition, the constitutive limit. Identity becomes a self that can fabricate itself without ever hitting a fence. And a self reduced to pure fabrication is, by definition, endlessly refashionable.

Seen together, these are not three separate misreadings but the same trick performed three times. Each predecessor, read properly, placed a point of resistance at his account’s centre, a place where something says no: which is, after all, how personal and social life work. For Austin, institutions can withhold ratification; for Derrida, language can both allow and suppress mutations; for Lacan, individuals are shaped by prohibitions that cannot be undone.

Butler’s conclusion ∼ endlessly remakeable identity ∼ requires precisely the opposite: a world in which nothing pushes back, as all barriers dissolve in the acid bath of self-identified gender. To reach that conclusion she distorts each of those authorities beyond recognition: she then pretends the splendid intellectual penthouse they built remains standing, even though she has demolished its foundations.

Theory, no common sense

The result is a theory with no veto left anywhere inside it — and a theory that can refuse nothing can license anything: except, of course, common sense.

Little wonder her Australian acolytes love it, even if they are scarcely capable of understanding its conceptual underpinnings, much less of working through the mind-numbingly dense and difficult scholarly commentary on her work. And little wonder, given the power they now wield, that a fatally flawed theory has become a part of Australian law. Tickle v Giggle is, unfortunately, not its last word. It is its first.



 FEATURE:

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This is crazy, one of the students said under his breath. Really crazy, the guy next to him muttered. Crazy being an extreme form of awesome.

Crazy world
of AI
art

Frank Rose in The New York Times


W

e were in downtown Los Angeles at Dataland, the soon-to-open museum dedicated to art generated by artificial intelligence, and yeah, it was pretty crazy. The students, from an A.I. class at the University of California, Los Angeles, were getting an advance look at the invitation of their professor, the digital art star Refik Anadol.

Founded by Anadol and his wife, the painter Efsun Erkiliç, Dataland is a highly anticipated addition to the city’s burgeoning art/tech scene — and arguably the most ambitious museum for A.I. art to date. But for now Anadol’s 20-odd students and I were the only visitors in a vast, black-walled, 22-foot-high gallery awash in light, color and sound.

One moment, brightly colored photographs of flora and fauna from Brazil’s Amazon were sliding down the wall and across the floor; then, similar photos drifted toward us in 3-D before abruptly speeding up and slowing back down; strips and circles of white light appeared in intricate patterns; abstract streaks of green and yellow, red and yellow splashed across the room.

Data and numbers

Beautiful patterns from butterfly wings, Anadol explained. Butterfly wings? Well, yes. The A.I. that he and his studio have built for the new museum is transforming data about rainforest butterflies into the constantly moving imagery his students call crazy.

Data is not just a number, Anadol pointed out. It used to be, but with the information explosion that began in the 1960s, almost anything can be considered data ∼ photographs, video, audio, even butterfly wings. Anadol’s data on butterflies ∼ their origins, their life spans, their color patterns, their behavior comes mainly from The Encyclopedia of Life, an online repository compiled by the National Museum of Natural History.

Using this information, Anadol said, We were able to model algorithmically how butterflies move.

By feeding this into the extraordinarily sophisticated software that powers Dataland itself, and the artificial intelligence that makes it work ∼ software that Anadol said is made up of more 10 million lines of code ∼ he ends up with a hyperkinetic work of art.

Decade old

Anadol started to make a name for himself a decade ago with much smaller, meditative displays of abstract patterns ∼ waves of color surging across a screen, their eddies and swirls reflecting weather data and other phenomena.

His breakthrough came in 2018 with a commission from the Los Angeles Philharmonic to project its newly digitized archives ∼ every performance of every symphony, every trumpet, every oboe, every note the orchestra ever played ∼ onto the billowing steel roof of its Frank Gehry-designed home, the Walt Disney Concert Hall.

No longer baby-faced at 40 but still irrepressibly bubbly and clad all in black, Anadol rarely stands still.


enmeshed in controversy

His work has been all but ubiquitous on the museum circuit: the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, the Serpentine Galleries in London, the Hammer Museum at U.C.L.A. and others in Spain, France, Belgium, South Korea and his native Turkey. But his first big museum commission, at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, left him enmeshed in controversy.

Unsupervised, his 2022-23 installation in MoMA’s lobby, was so popular that it was held over for nearly a year. Museum-goers, and their kids, were transfixed by the ever-changing display of fluid dynamics that played out on its 24-by-24-foot screen. In The Washington Post, Sebastian Smee declared it an early masterpiece of A.I.-generated art. Other critics were not so impressed.

Writing in The New York Times, Travis Diehl concluded that it was only a screen saver. In New York magazine, Jerry Saltz dismissed it as a massive techno lava lamp that offered psychedelic slush and bacterial blobs.

It's in the blobs

If blobs aren't your thing, Anadol can make an easy target. Yet Unsupervised has joined MoMA’s permanent collection, a gift from three of Anadol’s collectors. And the brickbats have landed him ∼ and Dataland ∼ squarely in the center of the art world’s digital divide. On one side are several prominent critics; on the other, leading museum curators and directors.

There’s not going to be a future in which this kind of work is not happening, Michael Govan, who heads the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, said in an interview.

It’s like Marcel Duchamp — if you know what’s behind it, you're open to understanding it. And if you don't, you aren't.

 OVERSEAS:

June 12 was Russia Day in Russia. To celebrate, Deputy Security Council chairman Dmitry Medvedev released a bizarre AI video in which he shredded the portraits of European leaders. Photo: Medvedev Russia/X

Moscow Times writes if you're a Russian billionaire and you break the law, you could lose more than your liberty. In recent years, the Kremlin has confiscated valuable businesses from the country's super-rich and taken them into state ownership. Last week saw a record as Moscow seized assets worth 550 billion rubles ($7.59 million) from Vadim Moshkovich, who is the 51st richest man in Russia. Moshkovich faces charges of large-scale fraud, bribery, intentional bankruptcy and international money laundering, which carry between 7-15 years in prison. His business, Rusagro, is one of the largest agricultural companies in Russia, ranking as the second-largest pork producer and third-largest sugar producer as well as controlling over 800,000 hectares of arable land. It remains to be seen whether the Kremlin will keep Rusagro under state ownership or put it up for auction. If the latter, it may struggle to find a buyer. Attempts to sell a majority stake in the the Yuzhuralzoloto gold-mining firm failed for a third time last week and, earlier in the year, Moscow's Domodedovo Airport ended up selling for less than half of its asking price. What else happened this week ■ Ukrainian drone strikes damaged several bridges linking occupied parts of the Kherson region with Crimea. Since the Kerch Strait bridge linking the annexed peninsula to Russia's Krasnodar region is a choke point regularly targeted by Ukraine, Moscow started using a land corridor of occupied land routes to deliver hazardous cargo like fuel to Crimea. ■ As United States-brokered discussions remain at a standstill, the ambassadors of Britain, France and Germany met with senior officials from Russia's foreign ministry to discuss ending the war in Ukraine. European officials hope their efforts will convince Washington to return its attention to the war. But back in Russia, officials are keen to present the talks as a sign of desperation. ■ Putin signed a law that would allow for the seizure of exiled dissidents' property and bank funds without waiting for a court ruling. ■ The Foreign Ministry said it is in discussion with the Syrian government about the potential "reformatting" of its military bases there. ■ After Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's party won a majority in Armenia's parliamentary elections, Moscow expanded its ban on imports from Armenia to include most food, seeds, flowers, wood and fertilizer. Moscow says this is because of large numbers of pests discovered in Armenian exports. But targeting the economies of countries seeking to leave Moscow's orbit is a tried and tested Kremlin tactic. ■ Russia backed down from its ban on the popular game Roblox, saying it had "fully complied" with legal requirements for user safety. The U.S.-owned game was banned last December on the grounds that it exposed young people to "LGBT propaganda." At the time, pro-Kremlin censorship campaigner Yekaterina Mizulina said she had received 63,000 from under-16s saying they wanted to leave Russia due to the ban.




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  • Cartier exhibit

    Melbourne gets unusually close to the source with Cartier, a major new exhibition opening at the National Gallery of Victoria on June 12. Direct from London’s Victoria and Albert Museum but expanded for its Australian presentation, the exhibition is being billed as the largest showcase of Cartier staged locally, bringing together more than 300 jewels, tiaras, watches, archival drawings and precious objects from across the maison’s history. ROBB Report.

  • "Dudley Moore" (1974). Credit: Duane Michals/Conde Nast, via Getty Images

    Duane Michals departs

    Duane Michals, an impish, provocative artist who used his camera to tell stories with quirky, cosmic, enigmatic or autobiographical themes, helping introduce narrative to modern photography, died on Tuesday in Manhattan. He was 94. A self-taught photographer and proud misfit, Mr. Michals neither belonged to a particular school of art nor founded one. He published more than 25 books; exhibited regularly at galleries starting in the late 1960s and continuing into his 90s; and had retrospectives at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh in 2014-15 and the Morgan Library and Museum in Manhattan in 2019.



The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email