Before AI was the big tech inevitability that would proceed whether anyone wanted it or not, there was the Metaverse. The post The collapse of Mark Zuckerberg’s Metaverse is a
The New South Wales government has been told, in a new report published this week by its audit watchdog, that it must provide updated cost estimates for projects. The Audit Office of New South Wales’ deep dive into major capital projects found that departments and agencies provide limited information on
Plus: the nation's fuel supply will be in focus in federal parliament. The post Abdel-Fattah speaks, Albanese welcomes EU boss, and Gout Gout runs appeared first on Crikey.
Senator Murray Watt has spoken of steps the government is taking to improve Australia’s water security. In a statement over the weekend, Watt outlined the achievements of the federal National Water Grid Fund since 2022. These include strengthened partnerships with states, territories, and local governments; the completion of 30 water
There is a persistent illusion in Western policy circles that regimes fall when they lose legitimacy. History suggests otherwise. Regimes fall when they lose the ability to enforce power and, just as critically, the means to finance that power. Nowhere is this more evident than in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
For decades, Iran has demonstrated that ...
The South Australian Liberals are now relying on preferences from progressives to retain a handful of seats, while Labor has commandeered the votes of those comfortable with the modern economy.
I can’t prove this, but I can tell you that while walking through the upper-middle-class North Shore of Sydney on the weekend, I was passed by an unusual number of stealthy Teslas.
They are native to the area.
There’s always a handful of them taken out for their weekend virtue signal. They are the second or third car of people who decorate their roofs ...
Our news is being bent out of shape by its alignment with the daily talking points out of Washington and London, and the challenge is structural. The post Look
In case you’ve missed any of them, here’s a rundown of the past week’s articles:
Evidence Before NSW Parliament Is Admissible When Applying for a Recusal Order
The court found that evidence before parliament can be used when applying to remove a judge from a case.
Click here to read the article
Offences Relating to Credit and Debit Card ...
ABC staff are set to strike for the first time in two decades after management's latest pay offer was rejected. The post ABC staff set to strike for the
Before AI was the big tech inevitability that would proceed whether anyone wanted it or not, there was the Metaverse. The post The collapse of Mark Zuckerberg’s Metaverse is a
The New South Wales government has been told, in a new report published this week by its audit watchdog, that it must provide updated cost estimates for projects. The Audit Office of New South Wales’ deep dive into major capital projects found that departments and agencies provide limited information on
Plus: the nation's fuel supply will be in focus in federal parliament. The post Abdel-Fattah speaks, Albanese welcomes EU boss, and Gout Gout runs appeared first on Crikey.
Senator Murray Watt has spoken of steps the government is taking to improve Australia’s water security. In a statement over the weekend, Watt outlined the achievements of the federal National Water Grid Fund since 2022. These include strengthened partnerships with states, territories, and local governments; the completion of 30 water
There is a persistent illusion in Western policy circles that regimes fall when they lose legitimacy. History suggests otherwise. Regimes fall when they lose the ability to enforce power and, just as critically, the means to finance that power. Nowhere is this more evident than in the Islamic Republic of Iran.
For decades, Iran has demonstrated that ...
The South Australian Liberals are now relying on preferences from progressives to retain a handful of seats, while Labor has commandeered the votes of those comfortable with the modern economy.
I can’t prove this, but I can tell you that while walking through the upper-middle-class North Shore of Sydney on the weekend, I was passed by an unusual number of stealthy Teslas.
They are native to the area.
There’s always a handful of them taken out for their weekend virtue signal. They are the second or third car of people who decorate their roofs ...
Our news is being bent out of shape by its alignment with the daily talking points out of Washington and London, and the challenge is structural. The post Look
In case you’ve missed any of them, here’s a rundown of the past week’s articles:
Evidence Before NSW Parliament Is Admissible When Applying for a Recusal Order
The court found that evidence before parliament can be used when applying to remove a judge from a case.
Click here to read the article
Offences Relating to Credit and Debit Card ...
ABC staff are set to strike for the first time in two decades after management's latest pay offer was rejected. The post ABC staff set to strike for the