Wiggles
@Wiggles@aussie.zone
- Comment on Award-winning journalist or Liberal party player: will the real Peta Credlin please stand up? 1 month ago:
I would assume that none of us find Peta Credlins political leanings to be surprising, but I am hopeful it may be starting to more apparent to the general public.
I think the answer to the headlines question is easy, there is a strong possibility Credlin a Murdoch shill, and protentially always has been. If you haven’t already you should watch ‘Nemesis’ on the ABC about the LNPs tenure from Tony to Scummo.
During Tony’s tenure, he keeps getting more and more advice from Credlin, or only discusses issues with her, and ignores the position of the remaining MPs in his party, prioritising Credlins positions. After Tony got toppled, all of a sudden you see Credlin on Sky News as a host dishing out opinions about the direction the country should take and screeching whenever the government goes against those ‘opinions’, as sky news does.
According to the below report from the guardian, there was a rumour floating around that Sky News offered Credlin a position after she left the Fedral government when Tony was toppled (published 21/3/2016):
“Sky News has declined to confirm a rumour that former chief of staff to Tony Abbott, Peta Credlin, is considering an offer to join the 24-hour news channel as a commentator for the federal election.”
theguardian.com/…/the-bolt-report-to-be-resurrect…
Followed by this article 10 days later (31/3/2016): theguardian.com/…/peta-credlin-joins-sky-news-as-…
I also found this statement from the above article very interesting, though I can’t say it is still the case as these articles are from 8 years ago
"Sky News is one third-owned by Rupert Murdoch’s Sky Europe, with the rest owned by Nine and Seven.
This article refers to a book written by Niki Savva who, according to Wikipedia, is an author/journalist and former senior advisor to Johnny H and Peter Costello. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niki_Savva
"It wasn’t just those rumours, it was everything else to do with their behaviour. Their behaviour, the way they ran the office, the way they ran the government, ultimately led to their downfall,” Savva said. “That is what people inside the Coalition genuinely believe and so many people told him [Abbott], they warned him about this, and he wouldn’t listen.”
And naturally some heavy hypocrisy from Peta in her response
"Niki Savva never made contact with me or my office on any of the claims in her book,’’ Abbott told News Corp on Sunday. “I’m not going to rake over old coals and I don’t respond to scurrilous gossip.”
Credlin said, also to News Corp: “After 16 years in politics, I’ve always made it my practice not to comment on gossip or stories from unnamed sources.
“Sadly, modern politics is full of both. So I’m hardly going to change this practice especially when the so-called journalist didn’t make any effort to contact me. This book says a lot more about her lack of ethics than it will ever say about me.”
theguardian.com/…/abbott-and-credlins-destructive…
There is also this article from 2014 (published 24/2/2014), though the article doesnt go into a great amount of detail, and the link to another report in it is broken, but at the same time AFR is a fairly right leaning publication and it doesnt seem Tony sued them for defamation, which seems to be the general way people in the political class seem to want to obfuscate their involvement in such things. I guess he wasnt as concerned about his hat as Bruce was:
"Prime Minister Tony Abbott has denied any knowledge of almost $900 million that the Tax Office paid to Rupert Murdoch ’s News Corporation between September and January.
afr.com/…/news-to-me-abbott-says-of-882m-cash-for…
And then there is when Tony made comments like this in 2014 (published 16/7/2014):
“The Australian newspaper is Rupert Murdoch’s ‘gift to our nation’’ Prime Minister Tony Abbott has told a gala dinner in Sydney to celebrate the publication’s 50th birthday.”
smh.com.au/…/tony-abbott-praises-the-australian-a…
Now, somewhat unsurprising, Tony was offered a position on the Fox News board of directors in 2023, which he accepted, because supposedly Australia’s LNP MPs are all experts in media and therefore deserve to have obtained these prestigious positions within News Corp without any prior experience in media. Oh whoops, my mistake, according to the below source (Fox’s own website), Tony worked as a journalist at The Bulletin and The Australian (strange he worked for these institutions prior to entering parliment according to the below):
"Tony Abbott AC was elected as a Director of Fox Corporation in November 2023. Mr. Abbott served as the 28th Prime Minister of Australia from 2013 to 2015. He was Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia from 2009 to 2015 and a member of parliament from 1994 to 2019. Prior to entering parliament, Mr. Abbott worked as a journalist at The Bulletin and The Australian.
www.foxcorporation.com/…/tony-abbott-ac/
So, there appeared to be a strong relationship between Tony and Murdoch before he was toppled as PM, potentially even going back to before he entered politicas, according to Fox itself. The person who Tony was closest to in the parliament (which, again, can be seen documented further in ‘Nemesis’), his chief of staff, an employee of the government, not an elected official, were making decisions for the majority of the party and direction of the government, without consulting the rest of the party’s elected representatives, which is, you know, the whole point of having political parties and representatives in a democratic nation.
While none of the above conclusively connects Credlin to Murdoch prior to her being hired by Sky News in 2106,I think it definitely leaves questions needing to be asked about Credlins credibility throughout her political career, her subsequent career as a political commentator, and what has now been further demonstrated as her having direct connections to members of the VIC LNP, who she is actively “dispensing advice from the sidelines” to.
Who knows, maybe she is just a useful idiot who got hired to be a commentator by Murdoch after she demonstrated herself to be such a useful idiot under the other useful idiot Tony in parliament, and it was just a match made in arrogance from then on. But I think there is also fair reason to suspect that she wasn’t just a useful idiot, and was infact complicit in everything, but I can’t say for certain (please don’t sue me for defamation Peta, I havent stated certainities, just speculations, plus your hat isn’t that important)
- Award-winning journalist or Liberal party player: will the real Peta Credlin please stand up?www.theguardian.com ↗Submitted 1 month ago to australia@aussie.zone | 1 comment
- Comment on Spending a billion dollars to bring solar manufacturing back to Australia is 'worth a shot', researchers say 7 months ago:
Those turbines look interesting, definitely a plausible technology based off that video. Looks like they have used gearing between the two blades to concentrate the energy from both blades so you only need one electric generator (generally just referred to as an electric motor but they do both) which is far more efficient (but still along the same lines of) stacking multiple up using electrical connections like you can do with solar modules to increase power output.
It also makes me think of this, youtu.be/Qbv_dtwTGDo?si=fSpRWpGqBlTEjMqH, which seems like a decent idea to me.
I’m not sure if it is a lack of feasibility that is getting in the way or just a lack of political will and interest. Could even be because solar is so cheap now that a newer, less refined technology (even in terms of legislation and infrastructure planning) with higher up front costs is just less desirable. I think I could still be worth investing in both in the long run (assuming it is actually viable).
- Comment on Spending a billion dollars to bring solar manufacturing back to Australia is 'worth a shot', researchers say 7 months ago:
I don’t know heaps about them directly, but in terms of rooftop VAWTs I guess it could depend on the type of roof, and ultimately the amount of wind that the rooftop will be exposed to.
It could be more challenging to create residential scales VAWT than it would be for commercial buildings such as the ABC building you mentioned (don’t know it off the top of my head but I’m assuming it is a least a few stories tall). I’d say a reason for this could be that as the amount of wind the turbine is exposed to reduces, so would the size of the generator, to ensure the force of the wind on the blades can generate enough counter-torque to get the blades moving and therefore generate power. Using smaller motors would definitely be possible, but you might reach a point where the amount of materials needed for each small-scale VAWT outweighs the amount of return through energy generation of each turbine, because the motor is so small, and counter-torque so small that the motor turning would only generate negligible amounts of power.
I would guess the large horizontal axis wind turbines would use large AC induction motors to generate the electricity as the blades turn. I would guess that AC motors would have some size limitations (easier to make really big ones than really small ones, not to say really big ones would present other challenges, but it would be incredibly challenging to make them under a certain size due to all the copper windings that need to fit in the motor) so once your VAWT reaches below a certain size a DC motor would need to be used. This introduces further complications, as our grid runs on AC, any DC power generation first needs to be converted to an AC waveform for the power to be injected in the grid (or used to power a load connected to the grid). This process is already performed for solar using inverters. It would also be performed for HAWTs (probably both AC to DC conversion followed by DC to AC conversion) to ensure the output (voltage, frequency, power factor) matches the grid.
It gets more complicated though, as inverters have an allowable operating DC input voltage range (these can be quite high voltages as you can place solar modules in series to increase the voltage of the generation. For example, if you put two solar modules, each with an operating voltage of 50V (arbitrary number) in series, the total voltage of that series connection will be 100V). This allows larger inverters to be used. It may not be as easy to utilise larger inverters in such a way with VAWT unless you scale up the number of them as using inverters for each individual small-scale VAWT could mean the use of a lot more materials.
Considering using them with batteries will also have added complications. Batteries store DC energy, so an AC to DC conversion would not be necessary to charge the batteries, but you would most likely still need DC to DC conversion (from memory they are called boost/buck choppers) to increase or decrease the input voltage to match the battery terminal voltage (a lot of solar inverters that can connect to batteries most likely already have these installed internally). These boost/buck choppers also have voltage input limitations, meaning they won’t operate if the input voltage is too low or too high. Therefore, to be able to use both solar and wind on say a residential rooftop, it may mean the installation of more, or retrofit of existing electronics so the power waveforms of both the solar modules and the VAWT can be transformed to match the grid or battery power waveforms. I think it’s probably unlikely that a smaller VAWT could match the voltage of multiple solar modules connected in series (known as a string), so either a second chopper would need to be added which can transform DC waveforms from a much lower voltage to match the battery terminal DC voltage (vs comparing the voltage difference between the solar string choppers input/output voltages), the choppers in the inverters would need to accept a far greater input voltage range, or as I said above, you would need to connect multiple small-scale VAWTs together to develop the necessary power waveform.
This may be one of those things where if we started designing/building/installing small-scale VAWTs about a decade ago there may have been more incentives for inverter and battery manufacturers to enable VAWT connections through the same hardware, or could be something we could consider if Aus goes down the inverter/battery manufacturing path in the future.
It could also be possible that people in the relevant technical positions have already considered all of the trade off’s and they just don’t add up to make small-scale VAWTs viable. This could be why we rarely hear about them. These things can always be subject to change though as technologies and manufacturing processes improve and change, and materials costs reduce.
- Comment on Spending a billion dollars to bring solar manufacturing back to Australia is 'worth a shot', researchers say 7 months ago:
Pervoskite still has some challenges to overcome before it can be a primary material in solar modules. One of the major problems being Potential Induced Degradation (PID) which is ironically caused by sun exposure, and leads to decreased power output from the solar cell. www.sciencedirect.com/…/S2666386422003174
The market is currently looking transitioning from p-type modules to n-type (both crystalline second based). P-type was the market leading technology for many years because issues like PID, Light Induced Degradation (LID) and Light and Temperature Induced Degradation (LeTID) were more easily resolved in p-type modules. N-types (also known as TopCon) are taking over now as these issues are being resolved and n-types are capable of reaching higher efficiencies than p-types. The higher power classes of n-types (>= 430W) over p-types (peaked around 415-420W) [these power classes are from modules designed for residential installations so have a surface are of about 1750mm*1100mm] is also enabling people to claim the maximum rebate for installing solar on their residence. This is because there is a rebate maximum that is based on installations up to a total size, and the newly released n-type modules (have only been in the market a little over a year) have a power class (440W) that divides evenly into the max installtion size so people can claim the entire rebate.
It looks like the manufacturers are looking to work towards developing hetero-junction solar cells. There are a combination of both silicon and pervoskite, with the intent to be to make the most of both materials properties to improve module efficiency while also keeping PID, LID and LeTID with reasonable levels across the module’s lifetime.
- Hemp's potential to become major Australian agricultural industry for manufacturing building productswww.abc.net.au ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 4 comments
- Comment on Property values are tipped to reach a new high. Here's how much prices have risen in each capital city - ABC News 1 year ago:
Considering
Only 1% of Australian taxpayers own nearly a quarter of all property investments across the country, amid concerns over escalating rates of wealth concentration.
Data provided by the Australian Taxation Office has revealed the extent of that concentration, with more than 7% of property investors – or 215,321 people – accounting for 25% of all property investments.
That 7% also have three or more interests in investment properties across the country, with 1% of investors – or just 19,895 people – currently holding six or more investment interests.
And that is only the top 1% of tax payers (which is only 7% of investors), I can’t imagine what percentage of property investment is owned by the top 10% of tax payers.
- Comment on Decision to allow wider truck bodies paves way for electrification of big rigs in Australia 1 year ago:
So I’ve been reading up on this topic a bit more and I came across this
Problem Australia’s interstate freight rail network comprises many long sections of single track. This restricts the number of train paths, reducing rail’s competitiveness with road, and hindering rail’s ability to meet growing freight movement demand. The interstate freight rail network needs to be enhanced to accommodate growth in the freight and passenger task, and improve efficiency and safety.
From here, …gov.au/…/advanced-train-management-system-implem…
On the bright side it is a proposal to upgrade a lot of the rail corridors to support more freight than we have currently. Though it was added in 2016 and is still only in the ‘potential investment options’ phase
- Comment on Decision to allow wider truck bodies paves way for electrification of big rigs in Australia 1 year ago:
Unfortunately we don’t have a rail freight network that either works well or reaches every township in Australia, and until we do encouraging the switch from ICE road haulage to EV road haulage is the best way to reduce transport industry emissions.
For a lot of the more rural towns (or a least for the ones I know of) that do have rail connections, they are only accessible using diesel locomotives as there is no electricity network set up to power electric trains. So if we don’t want to introduce more emissions from rail freight we would have to electrify the whole rail network.
Realistically we should be building rail and allowing EV trucks to be more accessible, but Australia is a big place, building all that rail infrastructure will take time. A good stepping stone would be to build rail connections to regional urban centres and then have trucks distributing it to the surrounding towns, but even building that much rail will take time. And that’s just the construction. The amount of time it would take to secure the land corridors for the rail would be considerable alone. AEMO have been having a difficult enough time securing land rights to build transmissions networks across properties
- “Move faster:” Engineers join call to fast-track Australia’s net zero target to 2035reneweconomy.com.au ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 3 comments
- Decision to allow wider truck bodies paves way for electrification of big rigs in Australiathedriven.io ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 41 comments
- Comment on A final blow to fossil fuels? Environment embedded in grid rules 1 year ago:
This actually seems pretty positive, but I guess also demonstrates how responsible Howard is for helping set in motion Australia’s apathy towards environmental destruction, especially when it gets in the way of fossil fuel operations.
- Comment on Lachlan Murdoch endorses Tony Abbott to join Fox Corporation board of directors 1 year ago:
Possibly, but Turbull did take over as head of murdochroyalcommission.org.au after K Rudd stepped down to take whatever diplomatic job it was he took.
I think the Murdoch press had a big hand in Turnbull being replaced as PM, because he was actually considering implementing renewable energy policies theguardian.com/…/turnbull-warned-rupert-murdoch-…
That same day the Daily Telegraph had warned of “a toxic brawl” over energy policy. On Sky the night-time commentators Peta Credlin and Andrew Bolt ramped up their negative assessments of the national energy guarantee and of Turnbull himself. So he is probably butthurt for other reasons too
- Lachlan Murdoch endorses Tony Abbott to join Fox Corporation board of directorswww.theguardian.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 12 comments
- Comment on "They’re gone:” Labor bins Kyoto carryover credits, shuts carbon accounting loophole 1 year ago:
The abuse isn’t the only issue either, it seems like some of the carbon credit organisations aren’t fulfilling their claims either youtu.be/Vw3jw5IYL2c?si=R75QkDgFQV_S6o06
- "They’re gone:” Labor bins Kyoto carryover credits, shuts carbon accounting loopholereneweconomy.com.au ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 4 comments
- Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 8 comments
- The unpaid super swindle: Labor’s industrial relations bill leaves biggest loophole openwww.theguardian.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 1 comment
- In Australia 6,000kg of clothing is dumped in landfill every 10 minutes. This is the life cycle of polyester T-shirtwww.abc.net.au ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 8 comments
- Pat Farmer runs up against former colleagues as 14,400km journey for Indigenous voice reaches capitalwww.theguardian.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to australia@aussie.zone | 3 comments
- Comment on Coalition attacks rooftop solar inverters in new scare campaign against renewables 1 year ago:
I think the reason why the working class continue to undermine themselves (especially people from the older generations) is the main stream media channels (9, 7, sky, any Murdoch newspaper) are owned by billionaires with vested financial interest in getting the working class to vote against their own financial interest, by convincing them it is good for the economy, when really the billionaires consider themselves to be the economy, and what they mean by it will impact the economy is that it will impact them.
This is why those news sources have always actively promoted the LNP, while actively demeaning the Labor party. They don’t even need to say any of these things outright, they get away with it by allowing LNP MPs to blame everything wrong on labour while the LNP are the government, but actively promote the LNPs active opposition as good when they aren’t in government. This is completely contradictory to how they neg Labor for being an opposition to the LNP when they are in opposition.
Ultimately, they created a cognitive dissonance within the working class to get them to vote against their own interests.