With Love from Gaby, Dave, Bonnie & Clyde

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Gaby came down with poliomyelitis on her fourth birthday. That was in 1961. When she was 32, in 1989, she left institutional care and moved into her own home in Merrylands West, a Western suburb of Sydney. David (Dave) became her full time carer. But as a quadriplegic with breathing difficulties who needed to sleep in an iron lung, she needed several people to come in on a daily basis to look after her diverse needs.

Anyhow, Gaby was happy to leave the home for disabled people and move into her own home. 40 year old David did for nearly twenty years a marvellous job in doing whatever he could for Gaby. But in the end his health deteriorated more and more. It became impossible for him to the the things for Gaby he would normally have to do as her carer. It was a rather sad situation. Gaby knew that David needed help but she did not know how to provide this for him.

Gaby and David both loved animals. Soon after moving in Gaby acquired a companion dog provided by the people who train dogs for blind people. Dave liked that dog too. They called her Bonnie. A cat named Clyde became Bonnie’s companion. Gaby just adored her animals. They were like her children. She always saw to it that they had everything they needed.

Gaby with Bonnie
Gaby with Bonnie
Gaby with Clyde
Gaby with Clyde
Bonnie and Clyde in front of the gas heater
Bonnie and Clyde in front of the gas heater

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Bonnie is being spoiled!
Bonnie is being spoiled!

I happen to have still a Christmas card from Gaby and Dave with a calendar for 1998 in it. The card came with a book: A Tolstoy biography by A.N. Wilson, first published in Great Britain in 1988. This is a great reference book and a great read. Gaby chose this book for me as a Christmas gift. She did choose very well. She always took great care to choose gifts for all the family for birthdays and for Christmas. Of course her funds were limited. So she always looked for bargains. Quite often her choices were astoundingly good.

This is the outside of the card.
This is the outside of the Christmas card.
And this is the inside of it.
And this is the inside of it.
Gaby moved her electric chair with her chin, she used her mouth stick for phone and computer.
Gaby moved her electric chair with her chin, she used her mouth stick for phone and computer.
Here she looks like having grown up a bit more.
Here she looks like having grown up a bit more.
Here she is in her bedroom getting ready for the day.
Here she is in her bedroom getting ready for the day.
After Gaby lost Clyde, she did get a new kitten.
After Gaby lost Clyde, she did get a new kitten.
Blackie, the kitten, grew into this.
Blackie, the kitten, grew into this.
Gaby is having fun seeing Father Christmas.
Gaby is having fun seeing Father Christmas.

Sadly Gaby lost Bonnie. She was lucky that after some time she was given a replacement dog which she called ‘Honey’.  Honey was quite skinny at first but soon filled out a bit.

Gaby can celebrate Christmas 2003 with companion dog Honey.
Gaby can celebrate Christmas 2003 with companion dog Honey.

 

What Joseph Stiglitz says

Two big lessons of economic research over the past 10 years are that inequality is not the result of inexorable laws of economics but rather of policy; and that countries that adopt policies that lead to high inequality pay a high price – inequality not only leads to a divided society and undermines democracy, but it weakens economic performance. Hopefully, as Australia debates its new government’s budget and economic “reforms,” it bears this in mind.

Joseph Stiglitz is the winner of the 2001 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics. He is a former chairman of President Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers and Chief Economist of the World Bank. His most recent book is The Price of Inequality: How Today’s Divided Society Endangers Our Future.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/inequality-why-australia-must-not-follow-the-us-20140706-zsxtk.html#ixzz37CagNfYh

Our Family in 1985

This picture was taken when Peter turned 50 in May 1985.
This picture was taken when Peter turned 50 in May 1985.
The Family met at the Opera House to celebrate Peter's 50th Birthday.
The Family met at the Opera House to celebrate Peter’s 50th Birthday.
I already had this red hat in 1985 which I was to wear for nearly thirty years!
I already had this red hat in 1985 which I was to wear for nearly thirty years!
Martin's son Tristan was born on the 16th July 1985.
Martin’s son Tristan was born on the 16th July 1985.
Caroline is allowed to hold Baby Tristan.
Caroline is allowed to hold Baby Tristan.

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This picture was taken at Ferguson Lodge on Gaby's Birthday 28.8.1985 and not 1984 as I said in my previous post. The lady on the right is Gaby's friend Coral.
This picture was taken at Ferguson Lodge on Gaby’s Birthday 28.8.1985 and not 1984 as I said in my previous post. The lady on the right is Gaby’s friend Coral.
On the 18th August 1985 Peter was in this HALF MARATHON, also Martin.
On the 18th August 1985 Peter was in this HALF MARATHON, also Martin.
Here is 25 year old Martin after finishing the HALF MARATHON.
Here is 25 year old Martin after finishing the HALF MARATHON.
Caroline and the Twins love their ice-cream.
Caroline and the Twins love their ice-cream.
Here are Caroline and the Twins with Baby Tristan at Stuart Park, North Wollongong, on the 18th August 1985.
Here are Caroline and the Twins with Baby Tristan at Stuart Park, North Wollongong, on the 18th August 1985.
In November 1985 Peter participated in this Mini Marathon.
In November 1985 Peter participated in this Mini Marathon.
In June 1985 Peter had also done this 8 km FUN RUN.
In June 1985 Peter had also done this 8 km FUN RUN.

Invest in people, infrastructure and technology for future prosperity

I just read this very interesting transcript of a broadcast from the 30th of June 2014. Joseph Stiglitz says, if Australia wants to prosper in the coming years, the Abbott government should be spending more, not less. I copied the transcript hoping that some of my blogger friends might find it interesting too. Here now is the transcript:

http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2014/s4036416.htm

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Broadcast: 30/06/2014

Reporter: Steve Cannane

But Nobel prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz says if Australia wants to prosper in the coming years the Abbott government should be spending more, not less.

Transcript

STEVE CANNANE, PRESENTER: The Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has warned that the Abbott Government’s proposed spending cuts are a threat to Australia’s future prosperity. Professor Stiglitz, who is in Australia for a series of public lectures, has told Lateline Australia’s future relies on investing in its people and that means spending more, not less. And the Nobel laureate had some harsh words for multinational companies avoiding tax, describing the amount of tax the tech giant Apple pays as an outrage. I spoke to Professor Stiglitz earlier today at the Australian National University in Canberra.

Joseph Stiglitz, welcome to Lateline.

JOSEPH STIGLITZ, NOBEL PRIZE-WINNING ECONOMIST: Nice to be here.

STEVE CANNANE: The Abbott Government is about to try to push a whole lot of large spending cuts through the new Senate. You’re advocating for spending rather than spending cuts. Why’s that?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Well there are two reasons. The first and most obvious one is that Australia is not in a bad fiscal position. Its debt-to-GDP ratio – net debt-to-GDP ratio is under 14 per cent. It’s one of the lowest in the advanced countries. It’s absurd to think that that is your major problem. Even your deficit GDP ratio is very, very low. The real challenge for the future of Australia are going to be related to investments – investments in people, infrastructure, technology – to make Australia competitive in a global economy. If you don’t make those investments, where will you be?

STEVE CANNANE: Well, Tony Shepherd, the chair of the Commission of Audit, made the point today that the Department of Human Services writes out cheques for $400 million per day. How is that an investment?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: A country’s most important resource are its people. And if you don’t invest in your children, if you don’t invest – make sure they have adequate nutrition, education, health, it will jeopardise your future.

STEVE CANNANE: So you see welfare as an investment?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Appropriately-designed policies are clearly an investment. One of the reasons the US has not been performing as well as it should is that if you’re not lucky enough to be born with the right parents, able to give you a good education, your prospects are really bleak. The likelihood that you’ll be able to live up to your potential are really very small.

STEVE CANNANE: The Government though is making the point that we’re already paying a billion dollars to finance the debt per month on the government debt and that is likely to blow out even further as Australia’s population ages. Is the kind of spending increases that you’re advocating for unsustainable?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: They’re very sustainable. I mean, think about it the following way: if you were a firm and you could borrow at very low interest rates – in Australia, the United States are currently able to borrow at a negative real interest rate. You know, take into account inflation. And you could take that money and you could invest it in high-return investments, investments in infrastructure, technology, education, in people, in making sure that all of your citizens are able to live up to their potential, then these investments more than pay back. We’ve done studies in the United States – I haven’t done them for Australia – but we’ve done studies in the United States where we looked at the return on these public investments across the board, and they yield a far higher return than the cost of capital. So, it’s actually making a country stronger when we make those investments.

STEVE CANNANE: But I know you’re a fan of the way Australia handled the Global Financial Crisis, but wasn’t one of the reasons they were able to do that was that their budgets were balanced, that they had that money up there sleeve for difficult times?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Well it is a good thing to have, you might say, a rainy day fund. Today, though, the world is in very volatile shape. The global economy is very weak. The US economy is growing about 2.2 per cent, not even able enough to create new jobs for the new entrants in the labour force. Europe, many of the countries are in depression. This is not the time for fiscal contraction. Now obviously you want to be very careful on your spending. You want to make sure you get high returns. But a lot of people talk about the waste in government. The private sector waste a lot. And in fact, no government has ever wasted money on the scale of America’s private financial system, which has cost us trillions of dollars. But if you don’t make these investments, you’re wasting resources.

STEVE CANNANE: You’ve written a lot about inequality. Are you concerned that the Budget measures recently announced by the Abbott Government, which the Crawford School here at the ANU found hit the lowest paid workers the hardest, that they could lead to increased inequality in Australia?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Very much. I mean, that’s why they’re widely perceived to be grossly unfair. Already – Australia is not the worst, but it’s not the best. Australia ranks about fifth among the advanced countries in the level of inequality after tax and transfer. That’s not an enviable position to be. I mean, you’re not worst – America is the worst. But the other countries are like – that are up on the scale are not countries you would want to envy. So, the point is, you’re already not performing in terms of equality very well. Your inequality in the standard measure Gini is twice that of the best-performing countries. So you’re not really, as I say, performing well. And these cuts are going to make Australia even worse.

STEVE CANNANE: What can we learn from the American experience, where you have argued that growing inequality is linked to America’s sluggish growth rate?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: This is not just true for America. The IMF has pointed out that high inequality is associated with lower economic growth and more economic instability. This is a very big change in perspective from the way we thought about things before. We used to say, “Well, inequality is bad, but if we do anything about it, it will slow economic growth.” Now we realise that inequality has reached a level where it’s actually having adverse effects on countries like the United States and other advanced countries.

STEVE CANNANE: But you want to see higher income tax rates at the higher level end of the scale, in excess of 50 per cent, I understand. How do you know that that won’t be a disincentive to create wealth and also an incentive to avoid tax?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: There’ve been very careful studies looking at what we call the supply elasticity, the response of the private sector to – in labour supply, in savings, to an increase in the tax rate. And the leading experts on this have looked at these numbers very carefully, have said there’s really no problem, so we could increase taxes substantially above 50 per cent. They’ve talked about …

STEVE CANNANE: How much higher before it becomes a problem?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: They’ve talked about 70 per cent or more. Now, it depends to some extent on how targeted you can be in your taxes. If you tax monopoly power, if you tax excess what we call rents of a whole variety of kinds, there are some ways in which raising taxes at the top can actually improve the efficiency of the economy. Let me give you an example. In the United States, the speculators are taxed at lower rates than those who work for a living. The result of that is more resources go into speculation. The result of that?: an economy that has an excessively large financial sector, an economy that’s excessively is unstable, excess activities in speculation, and, less of our scarcest resource, our most talented young people, fewer of them are going into research, into the kinds of things – transistors, lasers – all these basic research that would improve our standard of living. Why go into those low-paying research jobs if you can make a lot more money after tax in speculation?

STEVE CANNANE: The Treasurer Joe Hockey says that 10 per cent of the Australian population pays two-thirds of all income tax and two per cent pay more than 25 per cent. Aren’t they paying their fair share?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Well I don’t know the data for Australia, but I do know the data for the United States. Rich people like Romney, hundreds of millions of dollars in wealth. We’re paying half the tax rate that people of comparable income were paying because they were taking advantage of all these loopholes that they and people like them have put into the tax system. So, you look – I know for the United States that those at the very top pay a smaller percentage, smaller percentage of their income in taxes. Now they do pay a lot of taxes. Why do they pay a lot of taxes? ‘Cause they have a lot of income. The top one per cent in the United States gets over 22 per cent of all the income, has more than 30 per cent of all the wealth. So, yes, they should be paying a lot.

STEVE CANNANE: You want to see a crackdown on multinational companies who are avoiding tax. Now this issue is meant to be on the agenda at G20 in Sydney next year. What should they be doing about it?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Some of the problems are pretty obvious. You have companies like Apple that basically have created a corporate organisation that exists in cyber space. They claim to be in Ireland, but they found a loophole so they don’t even pay full taxes in Ireland. So, here you have the largest American company in capitalisation pretending as if all the production, all the profits are generated by a few people in Ireland. It’s an outrage. It’s particularly outrageous because a company like Apple would not exist if it were not for the internet, if it were not for government investments in technology that led to the internet, that led to a lot of the advances that they’re taking advantage of. So they’re willing to take, but they’re not willing to give back.

STEVE CANNANE: So how do you crack down on them? Because some of these companies have just as much innovation when it comes to avoiding tax as they do to creating new products.

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Precisely. And that’s the point of the G20 discussion. Say – look, this is a question of moving money around to these tax havens. Those tax havens exist because of what the governments – the governments in the United States and Australia have allowed them to exist. You know, a few years ago, we discovered that the terrorists were using these islands, offshore senders to help fund their terrorist activities. We quickly found out where that money was and we shut them down, for purposes of terrorism. But we said, “OK, it’s alright if you go ahead and engage in money laundering, tax avoidance. Those activities are OK,” but they’re not OK.

STEVE CANNANE: Do you think the will is there within the G20 to suddenly crack down on these companies?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: There is a beginning to get a will. Part of the reason is if they escape taxes, there are more taxes that have to be imposed on ordinary citizens. And they’re already having these cutbacks, they’re seeing basic services cut back and that’s going to become less and less acceptable. So, I hope, I hope they actually do something and not just talk.

STEVE CANNANE: You were the lead author on the 1995 IPCC report which received the Nobel Prize in 2007 alongside Al Gore. Last week Al Gore stood next to Clive Palmer at a press conference as he announced that his party would in the Senate vote to kill off the carbon tax. Were you surprised Al Gore turned up at that press conference?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: I was a little surprised, except that there was a deal as part of what Palmer was doing where he made a commitment to get a price of carbon if other countries were willing to do it.

STEVE CANNANE: And we know from the reality in the US that cap-and-trade is dead there, so …

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Well, it’s not quite dead. Actually – the States are actually doing a lot in both the East Coast and the West Coast, so there is an understanding in certain parts of our country that climate change is a real – really serious problem. And there is a resolve on the coast to do something about it. And if we had the right president and right congress, we will do something about it. I would prefer to keep the carbon tax. I think having a price of carbon to send a signal that one of our most valuable resources is our environment, and once we destroy it, we won’t get it back again.

STEVE CANNANE: The Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has said that he’s not going to take action on climate change, which “clobbers our economy”. Would maintaining a price on carbon have clobbered the Australian economy though?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Absolutely not. In fact, I would say it actually puts you in a better position, because we know that eventually there will be a price of carbon. The fact of the matter is – even the United States, which is a moderate climate, some of us used to think that, yes, the south would get hotter and less pleasant to live in, but Minnesota would get warmer and actually would be nicer. We now realise that our economy is facing a very big cost, as where variability goes up, crops are being destroyed, hurricanes. We are paying a very big cost.

STEVE CANNANE: But if Australia acts before the rest of the world, are they not ceding an economic advantage to those countries?

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: No. First, you’re getting in a better position than other countries to deal with the inevitable. And secondly, if you’re taxing carbon, you’re getting revenue that you would otherwise have to get from other sources. Ask a simple question: is it better to tax bad things or good things? Is it better to tax something that’s destroying the global planet or to tax work or savings? And my view is: let’s tax carbon and use that revenue to enable a lowering of taxes on savings and work. To me, it’s just common sense. Tax bad things rather than good things.

STEVE CANNANE: Joseph Stiglitz, we’ve run out of time. Thanks so much for joining us.

JOSEPH STIGLITZ: Thank you.

Progress and Poverty: A Suppressed Economics Classic

stuartbramhall's avatarThe Most Revolutionary Act

progress

By Henry George (1879), edited and abridged by Bob Drake, Robert Shalkenbach Foundation (2006)

Book Review

Progress and Poverty is an economic classic which has been suppressed in the US owing to its subject matter: the elimination of poverty and economic inequality by restoring The Commons. Written over 130 years ago, the book provides uncanny insights for the current difficulties capitalism faces (i.e paralyzing recession, massive public and personal debt and growing income inequality). Internationally George’s economic theories are regarded as comparable to those of Marx, Keynes and Galbraith. Yet despite being the third most famous American in 1879 (after Edison and Mark Twain), George’s work remains largely unknown outside of Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Taiwan.  

Why Development Always Produces Poverty

George’s goal in writing Progress and Poverty is to explain, in economic terms, why material progress (i.e. economic development) is always accompanied by poverty and increasing…

View original post 936 more words

From Wikipedia a Review: Once You Are Born, You Can No Longer Hide

Review: Once You Are Born, You Can No Longer Hide

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The world saved by children

by Camillo De Marco

24/11/2005 – “‘Once you are born you can no longer hide’ really is an African surname… And it is the real name of an illegal immigrant…”

Review: Once You Are Born, You Can No Longer Hide

“Once you are born you can no longer hide”, as is also said in the film, really is an African surname. There, people often use concepts as surnames. And it is the real name of an illegal immigrant that I met and interviewed.” (Marco Tullio Giordana)
A sailboat rapidly ploughs through the water in the dark of night, a boy on the stern sways and falls overboard. He flounders, resists and is then swallowed up by the depths of the sea. Helped by unknown arms he re-emerges, symbolically reborn from that amniotic fluid.

This is the most beautiful and important scene of Once You Are Born, You Can No Longer Hide [+] (o.t. Quando sei nato non puoi più nasconderti), the sequence around which the film’s theme revolves: entrusting to a child’s eyes the task of being astonished by the world, just as we are astonished by cinema. In order to recount the moral growth of his young protagonist, Marco Tullio Giordana chooses as a pretext the phenomenon that is marking our era: the migration of thousands of people towards our coasts in search of the promised land. Reception and rejection, solidarity and diffidence, tolerance and racism, hospitality and contempt, consumption and marginalization, rich citizens of the world and new barbarians. Us and them. It is simply the Italian version of a global problem. A problem that is no longer novel, which has already produced a massive amount of news footage and film images that have filled our collective imagination to the brim with rhetoric that we must avoid. This is precisely the reason why, during Cannes – where the film, inspired by the eponymous sociological text by Maria Pace Ottieri, was screened in competition – French and US critics were not very gentle with Giordana. They accused him of opting for a documentary-like rather than cinematic approach, of not being very courageous in his choices, of falling into the trap of pedantry, of not keeping his promises, of stooping to clichés. And if this criticism might even seem appropriate – the film is discontinuous and awkward at times – Giordana’s directing and the screenplay were not aiming to illustrate clichés but to render their predictability evident.

What remains at the heart of the film – splendidly shot by Roberto Forza – is the young Sandro Lombardi, played by Matteo Gadola, an actor gifted with an intense gravity. Sandro could be a descendant of the Carati family from Best of Youth. In him, we discover the ethical traits of the characters of the Giordana’s 2003 film – the same desire to take action, without giving in to prejudices and stereotypes. Sandro is a 13 year-old from the affluent part of the city of Brescia, who falls into the sea during a trip and, as in Kipling’s “Captains Courageous”, is saved by illegal immigrants aboard a battered boat headed towards Italy. Sandro befriends Radu and Alina, two young immigrants his age and, upon returning home, he cannot go back to his previous sweet life.

The boy’s perspective is lost, replaced by the more “conventional” and political point of view of scriptwriters Stefano Rulli and Sandro Petraglia, on the people of northern Italy, the schizophrenia of an unwitting racism, and an energy that is dulled by fear. The Brescia of the film is the most multi-ethnic of Italian cities, and was the first to confront its immigration problem and recognize that foreign labour was an indispensable resource. A Brescia that is simultaneously generous, obtuse, industrious, narrow-minded, sensitive, vulgar, united. However, in Once You Are Born You Can No Longer Hide, there is none of the overwhelming sense of guilt that permeates Michael Haneke’s Hidden [+]. Here, there is only Sandro, who learns an entirely new “language,” different from the one he is familiar with. Who comes to see people in what was previously just a presence. Who understands that friendship is a luxury and that integration and coexistence are only two beautiful sounding words. And who discovers the right not to hide, once we are born.

(Translated from Italian)

Are first born Children bossy?

I am a first born one, and as someone with two younger brothers I probably always tended to be bossy.   Peter, my husband of more than 57 years, is a third born one. He claims his two older sisters used to boss him around. He always lets me know in no uncertain terms that he very much resents being bossed around by me. I have to be very careful in what I am saying to him;  it can often be interpreted as an ‘order’ even if it is meant as a suggestion only.  I have the feeling Peter always  fears that I want to act as though I can make all the decisions. I think he feels immediately like a little boy who can be bossed around the way his sisters used to do it.

So I always want to try my utmost to sound like a person who is not bossy in the least. However no matter how hard I try, more often than not I come across to Peter as wanting to be bossy! It used to distress me a lot when I was younger. With advancing age these relationship difficulties don’t seem to be the end of the world anymore. I think old age teaches us to try to be more tolerant and accepting. And of course for as long as there is love in the relationship any frustration can be overcome!

Family Pictures

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Jenni, our neighbour,  gave us this tealight tower.
Jenni, our neighbour, gave us this tealight tower.

 

 

Thursday, 3rd of July 2014

Today we did get a surprise visist by Monika and family. All the pictures are todays pictures. Peter took some and I also took some. Caroline and Matthew were with us too. Sorry, nobody thought of taking pictures of them too. Krystal isn’t in any of the pictures, also Peter is missing in any of them. Ebony is in the background of the picture with Lucas.

It was so nice to have visitors! It was also great to have Caroline and Matthew with us for a while. I kept talking about our trip to Sussex Inlet in a few weeks. There’s going to be a special family meeting at Sussex Inlet for one weekend. Family from Melbourne and Newcastle are going to be with us too. I hope we’re going to have plenty of sunshine during our Sussex Inlet weekend. We are probably going to be about sixteen people  for this family meeting. The family booked four units already. Each unit  is for four people. There’s also an annex with every unit which can be used for additional people.