Carbon Tax Accounting: $24= $5310

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The carbon tax was the maddest deed of the Gillard Government, although the Mining Tax comes close. It takes a special kind of stupidity to produce two taxes that cost more to administer than they raised.

The scary bit is that these people still do not get it and could soon be running the country into an even deeper hole- see the comments by Mark Butler at the end of the story.

Jo Nova writes:

Carbon tax cost $5310 a ton. $15 billion to abate almost nothing and cool the world by even less.

If the Greens cared about the environment, they’d call this scheme “a ghastly waste”.

It takes skill to figure out a scheme where you set the price at $24 for something and end up paying $5,000. It could only happen when people are playing with other people’s money. That’s the soft left idea of good maths and good business.

That the Labor-Greens boast that this spectacular failure was a success shows the carbon tax was never about the climate, nor about CO2 or the environment. Follow the money. The purpose of the tax was to reward friends and punish competitors. Anyone dependent on Big-Government is a “friend”, and anyone who can stand on their own two feet is a “polluter” or a “denier”.

If the Greens cared about the environment, they’d call this scheme “a ghastly waste”.

The $15 billion price tag is $670 per Australian, or $2,700 per household of four. The real total is much more (when will the government add up the real bill?), because that tally doesn’t include the money wasted on solar panels, windpower, or the whole  “Department of Weather Change”. It doesn’t include millions in scientific research money poured down the sinkhole of climate models that don’t model our climate, nor the advertising, promotion and propaganda of all of the above.

A smart conservative government would add up the whole bill, then spend 0.1% (something like $20 million) paying skeptical scientists to audit, and check the evidence trail. They would trumpet their green credentials. This source of the river of gravy starts with the science. People who care about the poor and the planet would want to get that right.

Sid Maher, The Australian

THE carbon tax cost $5,310 for every tonne of emissions abated during its two years of operation, new government analysis shows.

The release of the National Greenhouse Gas Inventory last week shows emissions for the economy, excluding the land sector, fell 1.4 per cent in 2013-14 and 0.8 per cent in 2012-13. When the land sector is included, as is the case under Kyoto accounting, Australia’s emissions fell from 567.1mt in 2012-13 to 563.5mt, a drop of 3.6mt. Between 2011-12 and 2013-14, emissions fell 0.5 per cent or 2.9mt (there was a small rise the previous year).

No one can call this a success. Australian emissions were falling before the carbon tax came in. The big 1.4% fall only came after the figures of the year before were adjusted up. The 0.8% reduction they talk about for the previous 12 months does not exist after the figures were changed, yet they are still citing it. The current count of emissions will most likely be adjusted up itself, and the 1.4% figure is mere noise in the data — in past years the post hoc adjustments have been larger.

Opposition climate change spokesman Mark Butler told the ABC the report proved Labor’s policies were working. “The Nat­ional Greenhouse Gas Inventory — dropped by the government in the lead-up to Christmas in an effort to bury the report — showed that the emissions count for the overall year of Labor’s climate policies reduced by 1.4 per cent,” he said.

“That compares to a decline in emissions of 0.8 per cent for the previous 12 months, which shows that Labor policies to reduce emissions were working — to say otherwise is laughable.

Shame the Greens hate the environment.

Full article

Great Moments in Technology

I produced my first training video today- 15 minutes of me talking about stuff that ministers need to know when conducting weddings. Riveting stuff.

Producing it was a real patience tester for me!

We bought a video camera a year ago so I thought that would do the job- except the batteries were flat and the SD card has disappeared.

Then I remembered my trusty Canon camera does pretty good video. So I set it up and found that indeed it does work well.

I recorded my thing, and came up with a 15 minute video. The phone only rang once in the middle of it, so not too bad for interruptions.

Then the technical problems started piling in on me.

The file wouldn’t download to the computer via USB. I had to remove the memory card and put it into the card reader.

I wanted to trim off some bits at the beginning and the end- you know, where I reach to the camera to turn it on and then cough because that’s always the first thing you do when you’re recording a video.

That bit took over 2 hours. I tried several programs, and not one of them would simply let me select a section and hit “delete”. One of them would let me do that but then have the sound and the video out of sync. Another program told me “I’m not going to do the sound on this one.” Grrr.

Eventually I figured it out with some help from Mr Google. But somewhere along the line I deleted the “Documents” folder on my computer. Luckily I am fanatical about weekly backups, so I only lost a few vital documents. I have got no idea how that could even have happened.

Now I had a .avi file that was over 2 GB- way too big to upload to Youtube or Vimeo (and there’s something else I had to research and make a choice about!).

It turns out that handbrake, which is brilliant for ripping DVDs is also pretty good at taking your avi file and converting it into a mp4 or similar. My 2 G file shrank to 220 MB which is slowly crawling up through the tubes to Vimeo. We seem to have really slow internet this evening- but that’s just another annoyance to overcome. 🙂

So what I thought would be a great way to deliver training was a little more complicated than I expected. The learning curve was indeed steep.

Next time I might have some space in my brain to add some captions and maybe an opening clip of some sort. For now, I’m happy to have got to the end of the project.

Is Christmas Christian?

nativity

Every year at about this time, a bunch of religious zealots get on their high horses telling us how Christmas is a pagan festival and God has a special fire waiting for all those who dare to pollute true faith with these things.

There is, of course, some truth in these claims. Many of the traditions that have become enmeshed into Christmas do stem from different pagan cultures, but that doesn’t mean we have to forsake Christmas altogether. It doesn’t mean that those traditions cannot be redeemed.

The celebration  of Christmas itself was a subversion of pagan customs. When people were celebrating the solstice and praying for the return of the sun, Christians were saying the true light of the world has come. When pagans were worshipping evergreen trees as gods because they seemed to be the only life in the depths of winter, Christians were pointing them to the true source of all life, the ever-living Father.

There are some cultural artefacts around Christmas I would like to exterminate, such as the veneration of snowmen which seems odd on a blazing hot summer day, or the character in a fur-trimmed red suit. I would like to see an end to the treadmill of Christmas parties and the drunkenness that our culture says should accompany them.

We overcome those things by showing people a better way, the way of the Kingdom of God, not by railing against practices which people think are good and pleasurable.

To the people who think Christians should withdraw completely from Christmas let me ask you some questions:

  • When did it become wrong to celebrate the coming into the world of the Saviour?
  • When did it become wrong to honour people by giving them gifts?
  • When did it become wrong to redeem pagan revelry by telling people about the true God?

Christians have nothing to fear from Christmas traditions, whatever their source. What matters is that we honour our Lord in everything.

Mr Bean Christmas

Queenslander risks death for killer Christmas light display

Updated about 2 hours agoTue 9 Dec 2014, 2:13pm

A Christmas fanatic in north Queensland has taken his light display to the extreme by risking death to make it stand out.

The Townsville man is accused of disconnecting the street light in front of his Burdell home to give his Christmas light arrangement more oomph.

Ergon Energy said about 240 volts run through the lights and the man could have been seriously injured or killed by the current if he made the wrong move.

“It’s not called the silly season for sensible activity,” Mark Timmerman from Ergon Energy told ABC 612 Brisbane.

“Fiddling with electricity is a deadly game.”

It’s not called the silly season for sensible activity.

Mark Timmerman from Ergon Energy

Locals alerted Ergon Energy that the lights were out last week and electricity safety authorities were due to visit the man to consider charges, which can be in the tens of thousands of dollars.

If someone had been injured or killed because of the tampering, the man would have been charged under the Electrical Safety Act.

Following the incident there were a number of lights which were tampered with in Idalia in Townsville’s south.

Ergon crews were called to several sites in the suburb to find the security cover plates removed from street light poles.

In at least one of the instances, live wiring was left exposed by the unknown perpetrators, potentially exposing members of the public to the risk of electric shock.

“[Those who reported the incident] said they had seen school-aged children hanging out,” Mr Timmerman said.

“We certainly ask parents to remind children of the dangers of that.”

The incidents were reported to police but so far no-one had been caught.

Dreams Deferred

About a month ago, I wrote about an opportunity to join a charity ride on the Great Ocean Road with 25000 spins. The ride is happening in February 2015.

I decided this a morning that I’m deferring participating in this for 12 months. It’s a bit crazy when I wake up with a sick feeling in my stomach from the anxiety of doing something  that I want to do!

Physically, I think I could be up to it, certainly getting there by February. Last weekend I did a 53 km ride with no ill effects, so the idea of working up to 100 km in a day is really no problem.

I think I was starting to put too much pressure on myself in a way that isn’t good for me.

So The Great Ocean Road is now in the 2016 bucket. I’m going to sign up early and give myself lots of time to prepare and fund raise.

In the meantime I hear there is a thing called Bike For Bibles in April.

Crazy Dreams That Might Come True

Yesterday I received one of those emails that sparks something crazy in a person.

Watoto, the organisation that supports orphans in Uganda and raises awareness by sending teams out to perform concerts around Australia, invited me to this event:

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I love riding my bike.

I’ve always wanted to see the Great Ocean Road.

Raising money for Watoto would be a good thing.

The organisers look like they are fair dunkum

The ride is about 300 km from Geelong to Warrnambool- about 100 km a day. I’ve often thought about doing a really long fund-raising ride (even back when we lived at Hay I fantasised about that) and I’ve felt like 100 km a day would be challenging but possible.

The good thing about this event is that it caters for all ability types, even the cyclically challenged like me. They also supply support vehicles and mechanics.

Of course reality is that I have never in my life ridden more than 25 km in one go, so I have to ask myself if my body (and more importantly my will power) is really up to this. I would have to get used to hill climbs, so maybe a few trips up the Nandewar Ranges would be on the cards.

So why haven’t I signed up already?

Well I’ve never been a sporty person and so in one sense this is so not me.

I guess I really need to know if it is God calling me into this- or at least it is something He thinks is OK.

Really, deep down the one thing that would stop me is fear of failure. I’ve had those times when my stomach has got into knots because I’ve pushed myself too hard. What if, when it comes down to it, I try and fail? What if I have to pull out half way?

I suspect that most of what stops me from doing a lot more outrageous things than I do is that fear- fear of looking stupid, fear of not being good enough, fear of saying the wrong thing. So dreams never turn to reality.

Well I guess I won’t know what I can do if I don’t try.

More thought and prayer required!

Surrogacy or Trafficking

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There have been several very concerning news reports coming out lately about babies being ordered, gestated and born in Asia to parents from wealthy countries.

A few months ago, an Australian couple took home a baby girl but rejected her twin, a boy with Down’s Syndrome. The boy was left for the Thai mother to care for. Clearly the intent was that they didn’t want the inconvenience of a baby with obvious imperfections. It turned out that the adoptive father had previous convictions for abusing little girls.

About the same time there was the report of a wealthy Japanese business man who had fathered literally dozens of babies through a surrogacy agency, again in Thailand. It was never explained why he needed to have so many children.

Last night there was a report of an episode from 2012 where Australian parents took home one twin and left the other in India because the baby was the wrong gender.

So babies are now just another consumer item which you can buy.

Many Western countries have outlawed what is called commercial surrogacy which is an agreement for a woman to be paid to bear a child on behalf of someone who is unable to have children themselves. So infertile couples are turning to developing countries and, often through commercial agencies, paying healthy but poor mothers to have babies for them.

This is just repugnant on so many levels. It treats human beings- both the mother and the baby- as no more than economic units, a factory and a product. You pay a price and effectively buy yourself a baby.

When human beings are bought and sold like this it devalues all humanity.

When babies become commodities the potential for abuse is infinite. Even when regulations are in place, in many countries they are not enforced or will be ignored by bribing officials.

It’s not hard to imagine babies being mass produced for paedophiles to abuse and for pornography.

We kill babies who are inconvenient in the name of choice. We procure babies on the open market in the name of choice.

If this isn’t human trafficking, slavery by another name, I don’t know what else it is.

Lunar Eclipse

I didn’t take any photos of the lunar eclipse, because I was leading my cell group. We did go out after the group and see the light pushed back and the dark red take over.

It is actually quite difficult to take decent photos and it takes a lot more than a smart phone pointed in the general direction. Expensive equipment and great skill are needed.

The ABC published these excellent photos this morning:

 

Lunar eclipse: 10 stunning photos of the Blood Moon

Updated 48 minutes agoThu 9 Oct 2014, 9:33am

People around Australia were treated to the rare sight of a blood-red lunar eclipse on Wednesday night, as the Moon passed through the Earth’s shadow for an hour.

Clouds proved to be a frustration for many people on the east coast, but the skies cleared for long enough to allow some stunning photos.

It was a different story over central and Western Australia, where photographers were given a great view of the Blood Moon.

From a partially obscured Moon to a blood-red total lunar eclipse, the spectacle offered an amazing insight into the mechanics of the solar system.

Scroll down to see 10 of the best photos from ABC photographers and readers around Australia.

940 pixels The lunar eclipse, or 'blood Moon' rises over a neon sign in Richmond, Victoria on October 8, 2014

ABC reader Chris Phutully took this photo over a neon sign in Richmond, Victoria.

Adelaide lunar eclipse

City of churches: ABC reader Mu Young sent in this photo from Adelaide.

Lunar eclipse

If you look closely you can see the lunar eclipse above the Melbourne skyline. Photo by ABC reader Wolf Cocklin.

Lunar eclipse 'blood moon'

Reader Michael Aslin took this photo from Kambalda in Western Australia.

Lunar eclipse

The West Australian skies above the Kimberley provided the backdrop for ABC reader Phil Normandale’s photo.

Wantirna eclipse

No blood-red colour, but this multiple-exposure image by ABC reader Nidan shows the progression of the eclipse, as seen from Wantirna, Victoria.

Sydney Harbour Bridge lunar eclipse

ABC photographer John Donegan captured the pre-eclipse Moon over the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Lunar eclipse

Reader Alex Smeu took this photo, which captures the Moon just before the eclipse reached totality.

East Victoria Park

The eclipse emerged through tree foliage for ABC photographer Robert Koenig-Luck in East Victoria Park, WA.

Lunar eclipse photographer

The sky was cloudy in Sydney, so this photographer had to pass the time somehow. Photo by the ABC’s Greg Nelson.