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Author Archives: Therese Trouserzoff

The Greek Crisis put very, very simply.

07 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in George Theodorides, Politics in the Pig's Arms

≈ 8 Comments

Greek protesters, one waving a national flag, gather in Athens, Wednesday, June 15, 2011. Hundreds of protesters clashed with riot police in central Athens Wednesday as a major anti-austerity rally degenerated into violence outside Parliament, where the struggling government was to seek support for new cutbacks to avoid a disastrous default. (AP Photo/Kostas Tsironis)

Greek protesters, one waving a national flag, gather in Athens, Wednesday, June 15, 2011. Hundreds of protesters clashed with riot police in central Athens Wednesday as a major anti-austerity rally degenerated into violence outside Parliament, where the struggling government was to seek support for new cutbacks to avoid a disastrous default. (AP Photo/Kostas Tsironis)

Story by Atomou

The Greek Crisis put very, very simply.

Because, in fact and in effect, it is very simple!

Imagine this scenario: Great grand parents were told by a banker that they should avail themselves of the bank’s offer of very, very cheap and very, very simple loans. Your grand parents agreed and they borrowed some money. One might, if one is cynical enough, add also that the banker has advised them to borrow more, rather than less. I remember reading the words of the wise capitalist Onassis who in his wisdom about capitalist ways, said, “borrow much, rather than less so you can complete the project you borrowed the money for,” or words very similar to these.

So your grandparents borrowed the money in what looked like benign conditions and manageable interest rates. However, something happened -and a lot can between borrower and lender- and the bankers change the conditions and, more direly, the interest rate, which they raise to such a level that the borrower simply cannot pay the instalments.

(People of my age will remember the bankers’ brutal glee during Keating’s reign of “the recession that Australia had to have” as they raised interest rates to levels that no one had ever before imagined. Bankers love doing such things.)

So the thief, sorry, I meant to say the banker, says to your grandparents, “not to worry, we’ll just keep lending you money to make those payments. We will increase slightly the interest rate but that’s only fair and, in any case, the new loan will help you survive until things turn good for you and you can make the payments.”

The can was thus kicked along the path of time until you came along and things simply didn’t turn good. In fact, they have turned aggressively bad. The interest rate has increased even more, the economy has left you unemployed and with barely enough income to put bread on the table. You have no hope of ever making the next payment. The instalment is greater than your income (GDP, if we’re talking national).

But the bank insists that, once again, you must borrow more money to help you make the next payment. In fact they have lodged themselves into your house and began examining your every move, telling you to sell everything you possess at give-away prices. They have their eye on your precious possession and they want them for themselves and for their mates. They want everything you own and they want you to work for them, the bankers and their criminal associates and STILL keep making those payments!

As an individual little pawn in a capitalist market you have no way out of this. They take everything, including your second pair of undies and you are left to wander the streets, hungry, barefoot and with severely soiled undies. Yes, you can work for these crims but at slave conditions and for wages set by the Gina Rineharts and the Christine Lagardes of this world.

However, as a sovereign State, and one that has been locked up into contracts and agreements that were nothing short of criminal, such as trade agreements that locked you out the market place and further out still of negotiating prices for the traded goods, and thus, out of earning any income at all, or like having to work with a currency over which you have no control at all and which is controlled by the bankers in the club, you can do a number of things.

You can negotiate, relying on a fairly strong logical argument.; an argument which will say, “make the trade agreements fairer, make the interest rates fairer, lend us no more -you have loaded us up with too great a debt already- buy some of this debt yourselves, since that’s what you did with the American banks (bought their foul and worthless derivatives, i.e., bad debts) – or we’ll get out of your sinister little clique of thieving bankers and we’ll go our own sovereign way as an economy and, more importantly, as a society, wearing its own clothes and carrying its own dignity, our own pride and integrity. We will sell you nothing more from our treasures! We will buy and sell our products free from your crooked constraints and prohibitions. We will no longer allow your troika bureaucrats to sleep in our beds and tell us which side of the pillow we should sleep on. And we will certainly not let you touch our undies!”

And Greece is at this very point of the negotiations now.

The bankers are screaming “not fair” and the mongrels of the opposition, who feel, as do all fascist Tories, including our own in Australia, that they were born and chosen by god to rule and have never in the History of Greece been in a real opposition, (since they were always a duopoly), are screaming even louder, two- and three word slogans, no more sophisticated than those spat out of our own leader’s mouth. “Pay the debt, pay the debt,” they shout and bark like barnyard dogs.

I have staged a most unabashedly simple scenario.

Others who wish, may add the complexities and the more nuanced complexions of this moral dilemma as they see them. In the end however, it is a scenario about criminals, going back a long way… to the days when Germany herself borrowed an enormous amount of money from Greece and, at the same time, devastated the country. She has neither paid that loan back nor made any reparations for that destruction.

Down Home

06 Saturday Jun 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, Joan Baez, Kings of Leon, Petula Clark, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Rod Stewart, The Beatles, The Doors, the Monkees

humble-house

Back Down Home

Playlist by Algernon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mgw5j9h8528

Been down so long – The Doors

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RsKqMNDoR4o

Don’t let the sun go down on me – Elton John

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clJb4zx0o1o

Down on the corner – Creedence Clearwater Revival

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx06XNfDvk0

Downtown – Petula Clark

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nc_mv46NwT4

Downbound Train – Bruce Springsteen

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnzrGr78Mws

Going down – The Monkeys

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q6yk9wWNB08

Downtrain Train – Rod Stewart

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7dHoEmUtIs

I’m Down – The Beatles

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNtO91LJ_f0

Knock me down – Red Hot Chilli Peppers

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnS9M03F-fA

The night they drove ol Dixie dwon – Joan Baez

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DBOuqyqmtJk

Back Down south – Kings of Leon

Is there any such thing as ‘radicalisation’?

05 Friday Jun 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Politics in the Pig's Arms, Scott Probst

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

radicalisation

%22Freedom_go_to_hell%22

Scott Probst asks the timely question … Is there any such thing as ‘radicalisation” ?

These days in Australia we hear a lot about ‘radicalisation.’ This is supposedly a process where bad people, mostly outsiders on the internet from the Middle East, get into the ears of innocent young locals and turn them into bloodthirsty marauders who want to go into the streets of Australia, or the war in Syria, and murder others.

This does not seem to be a realistic description of what happens, for a few reasons.

First, the only way that these online extremists can come into contact with the young person via the internet is for the young person to search for them, or open a link they have been sent by someone else. The extremist cannot just broadcast into their phone or computer without any warning.

Second, the young person, for some reason or more than one reason, must be receptive to what they see and hear. Why would this be so? There are a number of obvious possibilities:

  • they are alienated in some way – isolated socially or physically
  • from a minority group
  • unemployed or with poor job prospects
  • social and educational disadvantage
  • mental health issues such as depression
  • drug use, leading to destabilised behaviour

Some of these issues have great relevance to young people. For example, a substantial percentage of young people suffer some form of significant mental health challenge at some point in their lives. Some estimates of this range to above 30%. Mental health services for young people are well documented to be insufficient, particularly in socially disadvantaged areas. Drug experimentation is common amongst young people, often leading to social and educational problems. The punitive/law and order response to this, rather than health-based response, leads to under reporting and surreptitious use, preventing this issue from being properly addressed.

Poor education also must be a risk factor amongst youth; education is chronically underfunded in Australia and recent political issues mean that this will get much worse in the future rather than better.

Migrant communities are commonly poorly connected to the rest of our culture. Recent political responses to multiculturalism, refugee issues and terrorism threats have only reinforced this isolation and made a number of ethnic communities feel mistrusted and this further alienates them.

All these conditions predispose the young people to listen to simplistic messages that tell them how to give meaning to their lives or right injustice, or take revenge on the people who have caused their problems. Added to this is the apparent romance of fighting for a cause and being part of a brotherhood – aspects which are only emphasised in recent celebrations of ANZAC day in Australia and repetitive message about the ‘glory of mateship in war’ and similar ideals.

Don’t forget, Australia itself has a long tradition of young men going to fight in foreign wars, from the Sudan in the late 1800s, to the Maori War in New Zealand, the Boer War, WWI and so on.

Combined together, all these factors are a heady mix of  ‘pull factors’ for young, somehow disaffected or romantically inclined men who want to prove themselves, to go to a war in a far part of the world to fight for a cause, no matter how misrepresented or manipulative.

Rather than make more noise about radicalisation, we should pay more attention to the ways our young people are driven to make this leap.

National Dickhead Day – Courtesy of First Dog at the Guardian

04 Thursday Jun 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Politics in the Pig's Arms

≈ 24 Comments

Tags

Amanda Devine, Andrew Bolt, Chris Uhlmann, Janet Albrechtsen, Leigh Sales, National Dickhead Day, Piers Ackerman

886-3

Pig’s Arms Goes South

26 Tuesday May 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Games People Play, Joe South, Walk a Mile in My Shoes

Power By the People

17 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Politics in the Pig's Arms

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

economy of a domestic solar system in Sydney, Elon Musk, lithium storage, PowerWall, solar power, Tesla

SolarPanels_600x399

Simulation only – this house has a LOT of panels for a domestic dwelling !

A Powerful Story by Emmjay

So we’ve had our solar power installation for about six months now – in Sydney, on a  fairly flat second storey roof with no shading – until late afternoon.  It’s a 5 KW rated system with 20 panels, but it’s got to be a super sunny day to get much over 4 KW… AND if its a stinking hot day, the panels become less efficient and so there are limits in how much juice we can expect even on a good day.

Wet and rainy ?  Lucky to be making 1 KW.  That’s not completely tragic, but it’s not a massive win.

I’ve seen the power production fluctuate significantly with even a single cloud passing – dropping the power from 3.5KW down to 1.5KW.  But the rises and falls happen pretty quickly.

How do the economics look ?  Twenty panels is a fairly meaty system for a domestic dwelling – many houses you will see in the inner west of Sydney have seven panels ~ making about 1.5KW. This isn’t going to roll back climate change, but provides a good feeling, if not much actual juice.

The cost for FM and I off the bat was just under ten grand.  But there was a rebate that brought the cost down to about $6,500 – that went straight onto the mortgage.  For most Sydney mortgages, an increase of this size results in an almost undetectable increase in the monthly payout.

Here’s a table that tells our solar story.
Power

When we’re out, and the house is using very little power, on a bright sunny day, we sell power back into the grid (no cash, just a reduction in our bills).  We make about 20c per hour.  So no Ferrari coming before I die, but over the summer quarter we reduced our power bill by about 40% – and remember this was a pretty wet, rainy time – not a great solar opportunity.  Power we put back into the grid reduced the bill by about 10% – so the rest of the savings came from displacing purchased power.  If we can maintain these savings the system will pay for itself in three years or less.  Maybe two years if the coming El Nino is a bad one.

You can guess that the best strategy is to try to balance our consumption with either our production and shift usage into the lower cost shoulder – or best – off-peak if we can.   If we’re making say 3 KW /hr , that covers a many of our appliances, but it would be foolish to imagine that it would be OK to run the dishwasher, washing machine and drier all at once. Pick one – and there’s a good chance we will not need to buy power.  Note, we have gas hot water – if you have electric hot water, the whole game changes.

Of course the elephant in the room is that the peak rate is still in force when we get home from work and the solar system has put on its jamies and gone to bed.  Solution – battery storage !

Not, not yet, friends.  Had we gone to a system with lead acetate batteries, the whole show would have cost around $30,000.  Not ever going to be economical.

But there is a glimmer of hope. Last week Elon Musk – the billionaire boss of Tesla (those wonderful fully electric cars that can get down the standing quarter as fast as a Ferrari – and when driven reasonably can go for up to 400km on a charge.  They aren’t cheap $90-110,ooo AND the charge takes hours – and costs about $25 at home – but they ARE beautifully engineered and look the part.  Sorry, where was I – oh yes batteries – and Tesla. Tesla is building a massive fully self-powered lithium battery plant – and they will start selling the domestic Tesla PowerWall later this year.

These are brilliant !  Most families will need one or two domestic models – there are also industrial models.  There is a lot of speculation about actual pricing in Australia, but the suggestion that seems to be sticking is that the lithium storage will cost about one third of the cost of lead acetate batteries.  And be smaller, easier to maintain and a lot more environmentally friendly.

And this will give consumers the choice of whether they go off-grid (maybe not on day one, I suggest) – or whether they use the PowerWall to store solar power for use when it’s dark – or even to charge itself up at off-peak rates.

The nay sayers (heaven forbid to suggest they are apologists for big coal) are going ballistic about the thought that this will cause a massive hit on the coal-fired generators – who have engineered their businesses for peak loads that (if the domestic and commercial storage economics work out) will leave the generators high and dry with a disappearing peak rate market.  They are bagging Tesla out because they say that Tesla is not yet profitable – but one suspects that Elon Musk does have pretty deep pockets – and big ideas that will continue to be game changers.

I have this sincere hope that the days of big coal – even peak coal – are coming to an end-  an end that is in sight – hoping again that it’s in time to slow climate change.  And of course, I hope the declining power bills will keep on keeping on.

Enjoy this article for free – no charge.

We Love Christine – Hyperbolic marketing copy par excellence !

17 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Christine, High fashion retail, Melbourne

Christine

Christine 1

Will the real Julia , no, Tony please stand up?

16 Saturday May 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Uncategorized

≈ 10 Comments

leadersdebate

 Story by Atomou

He has changed his mind and he backtracked, we are told on the first budget because by some divine intervention, he saw the light! Lo and behold, an epiphany gurgled up before his very eyes!

Believe that and then come and ask me about the bridge I have for sale!

Tony Abbott has worked for all his breathing time towards dividing the citizenry. And now that he has the keys to the Social Engineering Room, he is trying with renewed verve and determination to accomplish it.

Under the messianic pretence of saving our “bottom line,” saving us from an economic crisis approaching in horror that of the crisis which Herod, the great fear monger and death cult devotee feared, our Tony is using the same tactics as that Old Testament Roman client king used on his own people. Kill all the babies!

Herod was being an enthusiastic sycophant to the colonists of Judea, the Romans.

Abbott is being an enthusiastic sycophant to the new colonisers in Wall St.

In these “budget” reports he is dividing the citizenry into “small businesses” and “families” knowing full well that small businesses ARE the families and families must have more human interest  needs, rather than the needs of a set of ledgers, full of queer and manipulated numbers.

Many small businessmen, of course -many but not all- are small businessmen because they have small minds with an even smaller imagination and resourcefulness and so they rush to join Abbott’s army of small minded “businessmen” thinking that their business deserves more than their family and can’t or won’t see that the few crumbs Tony tossed their way come at a very high cost to their family.

Many other small businessmen are young, enthusiastic and capable of examining many things at the same time, not only in their local area but around the globe. These folks can see, can smell and can touch real business, small or big and, at the same time, see and smell and touch injustice to all things human and non-human alike.

Tony’s “small businessmen” also can’t see that if the family has no money, if it is completely penetrated by the end of the day and the week, thanks to the disintegration of work ethics by these “small business” owners, that family will cut down on everything they can to avoid going bankrupt and becoming destitute.

Discretionary spending will be cut, if not altogether, then quite substantially, the consequence of which will be that these small businessmen of Tony’s will be finding it even tougher to survive. This will be followed by excessive and endless whinging about wages and penalty rates and rules and regulations and welfare and everything that makes up for a civilised society, before they finally become destitute themselves and close down their small business altogether.

No coffees at the local coffee shop, no beers at the pub, no outings to a decent or even indecent restaurant, no manicuring the dog, no hairdos, no new clothes… Whatever it is that an economy is, it will be moribund, if not dead and with it, the family, the life, the 200,000 years of human evolution.

Right wing governments, if they are expert at anything at all, it is that they give the short sword to the citizen and tell him that the best thing for the economy is for him to commit harakiri.

That’s what Right Wing governments do. That’s what governments that have a greater love for money, than of life do. The bible boys knew that and they warned us. (1. Timothy 6:10)

Capitalism is for the capitalists, not for life, not for anything else. When capitalists fail, they tell us, “we are too big to fail,” and we must secure their continuing work on our harakiri efforts.

When we fail, they celebrate.

And at the moment, alas, that’s all we have in Parliament: RW1 and RW2, each taking turns at the keys of the Social Engineering Room.

I am mildly surprised by the new demeanor in Shorten and, more oddly still, the recent change in his language; in his vocabulary, in his turn of phrase, in his tone of voice, for no longer do we hear, “Labor will do such and such” but we do hear -at least more often than the previous- “Help me bring about…” A shift, in other words from a near-promise to do something, to effectively, a non-promise. If he doesn’t do it -and I suggest he has not the intention to do whatever it is he is not promising to do- then he, like Abbott and his death cult, will blame a thousand other people or parties or the weather, or the gods or the direction the wind takes George Pell’s fart, for “not helping him do it.”

So far we have speeches. Words and word plays.

And we have only past performances by which to judge these two parties.

Personally I see before me, Right Wing 1 and Right Wing 2!

And, personally, I also wouldn’t be buying eggs from either of these two chicken shit merchants.

Will the real Julia Bill please stand up?

Quo Vadis, Australia?

Gone West

15 Friday May 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Abba, Donovan, John Butler Trio and Midnight OPil, Neil Sedaka, Pet Shop Boys, the B-52s, the Panda Band, the Triffids, The Waifs

gone west

Play list by Algernon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NZ04BG7TfA\

Go West – Pet Shop Boys

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07zFCP1anO4

Wheeling West Virginia – Neil Sedaka

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvWg9aOYJDM

Fisherman’s Daughter – The Waifs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3k7OncTVHkI

Bridal Train – The Waifs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VmCmXwuDoU

To Susan on the west coast waiting – Donovon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CKmZUd6Epo

53 Miles west of Venus – B52’s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zXKtfKnfT8

Wild Wild West – Will Smith

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3Q8h-fDfEI

Once upon a time in the west theme

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N5akOOlGTI

Wide open Road – The Triffids

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Vy2K2H2i0U

Sleepy little deathtoll town – The Panda Band

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qih1HC-S7YE

Treat yo mama – John Butler Trio

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eivJthoVjBs

Warakurna – Midnight Oil

Expert Negotiator

11 Monday May 2015

Posted by Therese Trouserzoff in Emmjay

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Highway Patrol, master negotiator

r711197_5561452
Merv: he’s a police negotiator.
Gez: no, he’s not he’s just a bloody highway patrol jockey.
Merv: he’s an expert negotiator.
Gez: look, the wanker just sticks poor saps with speeding tickets and other bogus crap.
Merv: have you ever been pulled over by one of his kind ?
Gez: yeah, of course.   Hasn’t everybody?
Merv: and what happened ?
Gez: he reckoned that I was doing 15 k over the limit.
Merv: and were you, Gez ?
Gez: not in a million years.
Merv: so how fast were you actually going ?
Gez: how the fuck would I know ?
Merv: so what happened then ?
Gez: he said I’d get stuck with a fine for $256.38.
Merv: that’s a bit rich.
Gez: yeah, that’s what I said.
Merv: and… Let me predict… He asked you if you had a clean record and you said “Yes constable” – because politeness is important so he doesn’t also stick you with defect notices for bald tyres and dead tail lights.
Gez: yeah – and I said “are you sure it was 15 k over?”
Merv: and he looks thoughtfully in the direction of his partner and says “ I’ll see what I can do” …. He comes back and says “might be a slight error because of the rain”…
Gez: yeah he did ! But it wasn’t raining !
Merv: and he says “I think it was probably 9 k over and that will cost you $176.13”
Gez: how did you know that ????
Merv: and you’re eternally grateful to this wazoo for doing you a favour…
Gez: yeah, I was….
Merv: for sticking you with a bill for $176.00
Gez: and 13 cents…
Merv: for a crime you probably didn’t commit.
Gez: (indignantly) yeah !!!!

Pause…..

Merv: and ?
Gez: I see … master negotiator …..
Merv: and his till just went up for nothing – meeting his target for saving the state finances single handed. Too easy.
Gez: master negotiator ….. I’m walking home.

PCAU14_0195_fine

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