Thursday 31 December 2020

Boy On Fire: The Mark Mordue Interview: The Best of 2020. A Sense of Place Magazine, 1 January, 2021.

 Boy On Fire: The Mark Mordue Interview: The Best of 2020.

The Young Nick Cave

There is one book birthed out of Australia this season which has all the hallmarks of becoming an international bestseller, and that’s Boy On Fire: The Young Nick Cave.

Author Mark Mordue is a classic journeyman of Australian rock and cultural journalism, having struggled to patch together a living writing from small magazines and mainstream newspapers for decades now. As any freelance journalist will tell you, no matter what your talents or dedication turning a passion into a lucrative career is nigh near impossible. 

And then along comes Boy On Fire, years in the making and distilling the life of not just the subject, the redoubtable Nick Cave, but Mordue’s own life, sentiments and struggle.

Having been “snapped up” by a mainstream publisher, HarperCollins under its imprint Fourth Estate, Mark Mordue has editorial and marketing genius behind him and is staring the gun barrel of success straight down the throat. 

As for the book: It’s copping rave reviews at every turn, both in Australia and around the world. 

Photograph by Michel Lawrence

“It’s like something I’m imagining rather than a reality,” Mark Mordue told A Sense of Place Magazine. “I feel strangely undeserving of it all and am only coming to terms with its success because of the long struggle to bring the book to life.”

With a living subject like Nick Cave, whose ever expanding body of work has made him one of the very few Australians to achieve true international fame, from the outside it looks like Mordue had a classic journalistic problem: he knew too much, and there was no point where a line could be drawn.

But that’s not the way he sees it. 

“My original publishers were expecting a full A-Z biography of Nick Cave. I signed that contract in 2009. Finally got going 2010. It was expected to happen within two years. That was ridiculous. Then three, four. 

“The more the deadline blew out the more horribly obvious it became that I was way way way behind. 

“I tried to suggest the project could be broken into two or three books. They wanted the whole thing or nothing. In the meantime I was in a situation where I had spent all my advance. If I worked on the book I had no money. I had three young kids I was struggling to support. When I would then freelance and teach writing at uni I’d be failing to work on the book.

“No matter what I did I was being an asshole or a loser, mostly to my sense of self.

“After that it all fell in a heap. And I had some sort of breakdown; the whole thing crushed me.”

Nick Cave is a polarising figure, and through the book’s long gestation Mordue recalls that travelling to Melbourne to interview people who knew him in the early days “became a real drag”.

“On some sites Nick is treated like Jesus, and on others there are people who are looking to smash the idolatry and hate everything about him. 

“Any icon is excessively adored and overly hated.”

Mordue says amongst Nick’s early acquaintances, people involved in the overlapping scenes of inner-city Melbourne in the 1970s, people were suspicious, and a significant number wanted assurances that he was either entirely in Nick’s camp or ready to tear down the icon as nothing but a fake.

“There was no notion that I wanted to write a book that was complex and paradoxical, critical and respectful. It’s the same problem we have now with Facebook. People expect you to be for or against. That is way too simple.

Photograph by Peter Milne

“I wanted Boy On Fire to be both a good solid history and work of journalism but also a really fine and interesting literary work, and push at the frames of what people might expect from a rock biography. Let’s face it, those expectations are mostly pretty low. 

“The fact of the matter is I was never Nick’s servant – but I wasn’t his assassin either. People seemed to think I had to be one or the other, and worse still, found it impossible to conceive of any other reality.” 

After years in some sort of internal and external exile, the previous book contracts were cancelled and Mark negotiated a new contract with HarperCollins Australia and Atlantic Books in the UK. 

“The new contracts cancelled out my old debts and obligations. Which was great. But it was about much more than that. I owned my writing again and all the work I had already done. I have to give credit to the editors at HarperCollins. They were fantastic. They helped me refine and reframe the project, and concentrate on my idea of a Portrait of a Young Artist. They made it a much better book than even I ever imagined or fantasised it could possibly be.”

The Boys Next Door: 1976-1980. 
L-R: Phill Calvert, Mick Harvey, Nick Cave, Rowland S. Howard, Tracy Pew.

With the young Nick Cave, whether you were fans or flame throwers, there was one thing everybody always knew about him: drugs.

For a subject so ripe for tabloid exploitation, the question is explored with remarkable good taste. 

“I started to read the Keith Richards biography, and it opened with some drug story or other, and the story was so boring. 

“I thought, was that the best you can do? 

“What I loved about the Richards biography was all the stuff when he was a young kid listening to the radio. There was something beautiful and special about it which supported some of the ideas I already had for the Nick Cave book. 

“It’s easy to be sensationalist about it, and drugs definitely influenced the music, and the way they evolved from The Boys Next Door into The Birthday Party. 

“You can definitely hear the nature of speed and heroin on the EP Hee Haw. Drugs are part of the aesthetic, but they’re not the only part of the story. 

“I was interested in how drugs drive and fuck up social scenes, because I have seen that happen amongst friends of mine. 

“I was interested in the dreamlike hyper energy amphetamines bring to things, and from what I understand of heroin, the strange warmth of it as a cocoon or defence from the world. Not to mention the withdrawals and what they do to your nervous system and personality.”

Nick Cave and his fellow band members, including Mick Harvey and Rowland S Howard, were barely into their twenties when they made the move from Melbourne to London, and to fame, accomplishment and stellar careers in a turbulent gothic world. 

Cooler than cool in a country not their own, they appeared to disown their early origins, at least in terms of their musical careers, and to look back on The Boys Next Door as mostly embarrassing or underdeveloped. 

But the band were wonderfully energetic, a great live act, and Nick Cave’s performance scorched across Australia’s rock and roll scene of the time with brashness, exuberance and talent.

“The Boys Next Door live were a great band,” Mordue says. “You can see on YouTube the seed of their evolution. They were eating up influences like nothing on earth. They evolved so quickly. They were devoluring drugs, films, literature, and in the end they devoured each other in The Birthday Party. Maybe they are not so well served by the recordings, including their first album Door Door.

There’s some good moments on that record and Hee Haw. Maybe they cringe at or are embarrassed by it. I don’t think they should feel like that. Songs like ‘Shivers’ and ‘The Hairshirt’ would do any young band proud today. ”

There is much more to Boy on Fire than just another rock biography. Mordue says he always regarded the project as a social biography; with Nick at the centre of a kaleidoscope of stories. 

Photograph by Peter Milne


For once the blurb is correct: “As well as a powerfully compelling biography of a singular, uncompromising artist, Boy on Fire is a fascinating social and cultural biography, a vivid and evocative rendering of a time and place, from the fast-running dark river and ghost gums of Wangaratta, to the nascent punk scene which hit staid 1970s Melbourne like an atom bomb, right through to the torn wallpaper, sticky carpet and the manic, wild energy of nights at the Crystal Ballroom.”

Mordue is clear about the Australian nature of the project. 

“One of the motivators for the book and one of the things that make me angry is how easily we in Australia erase or annihilate our own culture and history. There is a complete lack of respect or interest. We look overseas to validate ourselves and we overlook or are dismissive about our own history. 

“Particularly in regard to rock and roll we don’t even understand that it is history. We don’t rescue or save it. 

“I wanted to rescue that time and that scene. I was definitely aware the book was not just a biography but a history of all the artists and people’s lives, the history of a town like Wangaratta, where Nick grew up, and later punk and post punk Melbourne.”

“Personally I could relate to that time in Australia and all the things that were coming into Australia, and the suburban landscape and the country landscape that Nick came from. There were a lot of parallels in all of that to my own life. 

Boy On Fire is absolutely a biography about an Australian artist and an Australian scene. To my own way of thinking it should sit comfortably on a bookshelf beside biographies of Brett Whitely, Patrick White and Germaine Greer.

“From Nick Cave’s perspective, The Boys Next Door is a transitory phase, juvenalia. They were a really fine young band, and it was the start of something special. 

“Nick has become a major international star now, but they were a real band, a really potent group of people. The Birthday Party would prove how true that was.

“My point is that Nick was a socially formed artist, and that the influence of all the people around him – in the band, and around the band, as well as growing up earlier in country Victoria – had a very big influence in where he was to go.”

Mordue writes in the Prologue: “This book keyed itself in to Nick Cave’s childhood and youth, from Wangaratta to the Crystal Ballroom scene in Melbourne, through the early landscapes, novels, artists, loves and friendships that shaped him. Much of which Nick would continually refer to in his songs, books, poetry and films.

“What emerges in this biography is a remembering of that world. Not just Nick Cave’s story of growing up, but the memories and stories of all those around him. The life and times of a boy on fire, with all that he absorbed in order to dream himself into becoming one of the darkest, and then one of the brightest, of our rock ‘n’ roll stars. Light enough for the many to share.”

Photograph by Peter Milne

So what does the older Nick Cave, now a much awarded and applauded man in his sixties, think of it all? 

“No idea. Guess I’ll find out. He’d have to feel mixed about it, I think. Who could read a book about their growing up and formative years as an artist, written by someone else, and not feel mixed at best. 

“I know there’s stuff in the book he will not like; things he might appreciate, the writing along with that I’d hope; and things he may not know how to respond to or even recognise, not to mention things he’d say were plain wrong. 

Biography is a story. It’s full of tensions between the facts and different people’s versions of events and the telling of a story and how the teller shapes it. It’s history and fictional techniques, journalism and performance, all together. Hopefully it gets to what is true in feeling as much as detail. I did my best to do both. But there’s always another story to be told.”


This story was written and compiled by veteran Australian journalist John Stapleton. A collection of his journalism is being constructed here. A 1979 interview with Nick Cave and Rowland Howard can be found here.

Cops For Covid Truth: The Best of 2020. As Editor, A Sense of Place Magazine, 1 January, 2021.

 Cops For Covid Truth: The Best of 2020.

An Open Letter to Michael Fuller, Police Commissioner of New South Wales Concerning the Police Enforcement of Ongoing COVID-19 restrictions

Illustrated by Michael Fitzjames

We are writing to you to raise concerns we have about the use of the police to enforce the ongoing restrictions placed upon our citizens relating to COVID-19, which has seriously eroded community trust in our great police force.

Since the Attorney General Declared a State of Emergency for the novel coronavirus, our governments have acted upon certain powers to impose restrictions on its citizens, using the police to enforce their rules.

Due to the novel nature of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, most people concurred that certain restrictions should be followed, until more was learnt about the virus.

Frightening Projectons

With the initial modelling from the Imperial College in the UK and the Peter Doherty Institute here in Australia, indicating a catastrophic number of cases that would severely burden our hospital system and could result in up to 150,000 Australian deaths, it is easy to comprehend why our governments would respond as they did and why the vast
population would comply.

With these frightening projections it became evident that we needed to find a way to quickly diagnose the disease. Yet the Centre for Disease Control in the US states that “no quantified virus isolates of the 2019-nCoV are currently available”.

So even without the virus being isolated, the RT PCR test was picked to become the gold standard for testing.

We note that the modelling was later found to have serious calculation errors, such that experts who later reviewed it have said “no serious scientist gives (it) any validity”.

Critical Decisions

And now the RT PCR test has been proven to be unreliable at best, with the inventor stating it should “never be used to diagnose infectious disease”, because it cannot tell if what it detected is alive or dead.

This test is still being relied upon to make critical decisions in the interest of public health and safety.

In the same way we cannot use an inaccurate speed detection device to proctor a civilian’s speed, the same must be demanded of a faulty R T PCR test and as such, police should not in any way mandate testing for Covid-19, or rely on any outcome of the results.

The Percentage of Deaths

Now that we have almost 12 months of statistical data that can be relied upon, in place of flawed computer modelling, these statistics show a reality that is far from the modelling projections, which were relied upon by National Cabinet in their response.

For example, we now know that around 45% of people who contract the virus are asymptomatic and asymptomatic transmission is between 0-2.2%. We also know that 80% of people who contract the virus will only have mild symptoms and it is overwhelmingly the elderly and immunocompromised who are at risk of severe symptoms that could result in death.

At the time of writing, the world-wide survival rate for Covid-19 is 97.3%. The ordinary flu is 99.9%.

Furthermore, statistics clearly show that while the confirmed cases may be on the rise, the percentage of deaths is plummeting.

The Statistics

Here are some statistics which reflect this reality: –

Sweden and Taiwan did not enforce lockdown on its citizens like much of the world did.

Although Sweden failed to take better precautions to protect the elderly in the early stages, their death rate is comparable, and Taiwan’s is outstanding: –

The statistics show there is a high infection rate across the globe, but very low deaths; regardless of whether there was forced lockdowns or not. What we can derive from analysis of this is that these two distinctly different ways have resulted in much the same outcome.

We note from the recent Federal budget, huge debt and unemployment, is that our lockdowns have created a series of problems that now seem to outweigh the threat this virus poses.

A Greater Threat

In our line of work, we know that the socioeconomical problems created
here will transpire into a greater threat down the track, as people struggle to deal with the collateral damage this is causing.

We have been told that the advice from the World Health Organization is a key aspect to the National Cabinet response, yet Dr David Nabarro of the WHO recently stated: “We in the World Health Organization do not advocate lockdowns as the primary means of control of this virus,”

So in spite of the facts, as they stand now, it would appear that the National Cabinet has been lagging in its capacity to adapt to the reality of the situation and this is causing them to fail in their duty to respond in proportion to the risk. The risk being overwhelmingly with the elderly and immunocompromised.

What is even more concerning is the prohibition on prescribing hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19 , when over 121 peer reviewed scientific studies have shown it to be effective in treating and preventing the disease. Instead, the federal government has done a vaccine deal with AstraZeneca and Australians told we cannot expect to go back to normal until a vaccine arrives.

Guilty

AstraZeneca has been found guilty of offences relating to off-label or unapproved promotion of medical products, making false claims, kickbacks and bribery, consumer protection violation, healthcare offences, government-contracting violations and more.

Since 2000 they have been fined over US$1.1billion dollars for these offences and violations.

Still, they have been granted protection from future product liability claims
relating to its COVID-19 vaccine.

Alarmingly, Prime Minister Scott Morrison stated they will make the vaccine “as mandatory as you can possibly make it”, in spite of the criminal record of its producer, their exemption from liability claims, the fact we already have at least two approved and extremely safe medications in Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine; shown to be effective treatments and the reality that the virus does not pose a serious threat to the healthy.

The Evidence

It seems these decisions appear to be corporate interests, not in the best
interests of public health and wellbeing as is claimed.

All this indicates that the ongoing restrictions on the healthy population is a
disproportionate response, yet the police are still expected to continue to enforce these measures and at risk of being forced to vaccinate against a disease that is showing not to be virulent, with a vaccine that has had no long-term safety studies and then forcing it upon the population.

The evidence would suggest resources are better directed to
protect the vulnerable.

We are concerned with the legitimacy of the actions we are being told to take against the citizens of Australia. States and territories cannot rise above the Commonwealth constitution as well as international treaties we are signatories to, yet this is occurring.

Unprotected

Under the state of emergency, the emergency requirements are qualified and restricted by the significant fact that emergency requirements and directions cannot request an individual to be isolated, detained, tested, vaccinated, medically treated or bodily searched in the absence of a biosecurity control order issued to the individual.

These measures are referred to as biosecurity measures and are captured under Subdivision B of Division 3 of Part 3 of Chapter 2 of the Biosecurity Act 2015.

Emergency and public health powers, at the States and Territories, do not provide a carte blanche to breach an individual’s human rights by isolating them, or detaining them or testing them without the proper required notifications and risk assessments first.

There is an inter-governmental agreement which places the Commonwealth in the lead as well as the Australian Health Sector Emergency Response Plan. This ensures that the States and Territories Act to compliment the Federal Legislative Framework.

Article 7 of the International Convention of Civil and Political Rights states: “No-one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, in particular, no-one shall be subjected without his free consent to medical or scientific experimentation.”

Article 27 of the Vienna convention on the law of treatise: “A party may not invoke the provision of its internal law as justification of its failure to perform a treaty.”


A Grand Incompetence

Article 7 of the Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986 states “no-one should be subjected to torture or to cruel inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, in particular, no-one shall be subject without his free consent to medical or scientific
experimentation.

Section 109 of the commonwealth of Australia constitution states “when a law of a state is inconsistent with a law of the commonwealth, the latter shall prevail, and the former shall to the extent of the inconsistency be valid.”

With federal and international legislation breaches, it will be taken that we are complicit and consensual in their undertaking on the people of Australia, potentially rendering us criminally liable under the Crimes Act 1914, as well as the Criminal Code Act 1995.

Many members of the force are fed up with the approach to enforce oppressive rules placed upon the population in the name of COVID-19 and the looming mandatory vaccinations. We feel a real calling to do our part to stop this oppression.

NSW POLICE OFFICER

So we are writing to you to raise the following issues:


• Police Force employees have ‘choice’ as to whether or not to receive vaccines;
• The Police believe that all members of the community also have choice around receiving vaccines;
• Police do not participate in any way in the forcing of vaccines upon the
population;
• That the Police Association start preparing to defend Police employees who choose to not be vaccinated
• To raise the alarm that there is a global dictatorship occurring and the Police Force is being used as a tool to push these global and corporate agendas upon the population; and
• To warn the Police Force not to simply acquiesce to these requests, rules and laws and to act in the best interest of its population, not tyranny of government.

Recently letters have been written to our leaders from the legal fraternity, including high profile Judges and QC’s, The Australian Institute for Progress penned by 30 public intellectuals including 15 professors of relevant disciplines, one of whom is an advisor on health and well-being economics to the UK government, Advocate Me’s open letter to all leaders seeking to review disproportionate response to SAR-CoV-2 , as well as
hundreds of doctors from the medical fraternity.

Despite the government continually parroting that they are following the advice of ‘the experts’, all these requests have been ignored and the police used as the enforcers of these senseless rules.

We ask that you consider the information provided herein and the NSW Police Force statement of values: –
Each member of the Police Force is to Act in a manner which:
▪ Places integrity above all;
▪ Upholds the rule of law;
▪ Preserves the rights and freedoms of individuals;
▪ Seeks to improve the quality of life by community involvement in policing;
▪ Strives for citizen and police personal satisfaction;
▪ Capitalises on the wealth of human resources;
▪ Makes efficient and economical use of public resources; and
▪ Ensures that authority is exercised responsibly.

Many of us believe that we are removing our own rights and freedoms by enforcing these rules upon the community, including our family and friends.

Held To Account

And the community are confounded by the intensified police enforcement around peaceful freedom protests and how inconsistent this was when compared with the Black Lives Matter protests. This contradiction is further destroying public confidence.

We are reaching out to all our fellow police officers across the country, to write a similar letter to their respective police commissioners, or sign our form at https://advocateme.wixsite.com/copsforcovidtruth to show your support for this stance, which we have called Cops for Covid Truth.

With trust in our police force now seriously eroded, we ask you to consider now challenging the necessity of the ongoing restrictions to restore community trust, by being an integral part of returning our State and Country back to normality.


This petition is signed by Senior Constable Alexander Cooney of the NSW Police Force, Australia. And other signatories.

NSW Police have confirmed to Australian Associated Press that the duty status of Senior Constable Cooney is under review as part of an investigation into the matter.

“The officer, who is attached to a specialist command in the northern region, has been spoken to,” a spokeswoman said. “His duty status is currently under review. It would be inappropriate to comment further at this time.”

Full details of this initiative can be found at the website for Cops For Covid Truth


Illustrator: Michael Fitzjames

Michael Fitzjames worked as an illustrator for The Guardian newspaper in London from 1978 to 1980, The Sydney Morning Herald from 1990 to 2000, and The Australian Financial Review from 2000 to 2012. His work is held in many significant institutions including the State Library of New South Wales, State Library of Victoria and the Australian War Memorial.

RELATED STORIES

Morrison Government Wreathed in Scandal: The Best of 2020. A Sense of Place Magazine, 1 January, 2021.

 Morrison Government Wreathed in Scandal: The Best of 2020.

Extract from Dark Dark Policing

The sorry Covid-19 saga says a lot about Australia and the churn at the top of the pile, the Prime Minister Scott Morrison. None of it complimentary. We have seen in the past few days the deliberate creation of panic in the broader population, a compliant mainstream media becoming handmaidens in support of the demolition of the country and effectively the introduction of martial law into Australia.

What seemed impossible only ten days ago is now all too possible.

Suddenly only two people can gather together at any one time and anyone who defies the order can be jailed.

Suddenly, as if in a mystical sense, the streets hold menace and it feels as if the food riots of the future are breaking into the present. Already people look at each other suspiciously and are frightened of being caught outside.

Throwing the country’s citizens to the wolves, driving millions onto the dole queues, blatantly plundering the poor to give to the rich, is the finale of a process which has been years in the making.

This is a government run by an extremist strand of God-botherers who hate journalists and hate free speech; for the last thing these people want is for their sins to be exposed.

Well, thank God for journalists!

Immediately after Scott Morrison won the May election in an improbable victory, after years of poor governance by the ruling Coalition, one of Australia’s most accomplished journalists, Michael West, wrote in his piece “Election 2019: How good is plutocracy!”:

“The votes were still being counted, the final tally of seats in parliament was yet to be settled, when the inevitable list of demands from big business lobbed in the financial press.

“For ordinary Australians, there will be no ‘working with the government’. The Great Unwashed have had their say, they can have their say again on a Saturday sometime in 2022. Between now and then, for every week in between, the business lobby will enjoy a privilege of access to those in government which is rarely available to the ordinary citizen.”

As West recorded, the Very Big End of Town queued up to congratulate Morrison.

“A truly outstanding result,” said Fortescue Metals chief executive Elizabeth Gaines.

“We look forward to working with the new government, declared Origin Energy chief Frank Calabria.

Australian multinational MYOB’s boss Tim Reed expressed relief at the election result “given Labor made it clear they would push for minimum-wage rises”.

Good Lord, we can’t start paying the peasants a proper wage, where would it all end?

Available on Amazon Kindle. Paperback available shortly.

“Stop the regulation and stop the bullshit” came the call to arms from multimillionaire retailer Gerry Harvey.

The problem for the government was that these corporate giants might be immensely wealthy and they most certainly had the ear of this government, but their votes were few. That privilege lay with the hordes, the Great Unwashed.

The only thing that has kept the conservatives from a complete collapse in public support is the dismal state of the Opposition.

Morrison won promising to “burn for the Australian people every single day”.

Well, that didn’t happen. It was straight back to business as usual. Nothing changed.

The government continued to hold the people in complete contempt. Electricity prices remained sky high, and owning a home stayed out of reach for many. Standards of living were static or falling. Wages flat. The country continued to fall down the international rankings in terms of educational outcomes.

Scandal after scandal enveloped the government.

Morrison, never known as an ideas man, increasingly presents as a fat self-satisfied seal frolicking in shallow seas. Even in this time of crisis.

His enormously verbose press conferences, widely condemned by commentators and messaging experts, have to be seen to be believed: “We’re battling this virus with all the measures that we’re putting in place, and we’re battling the economic crisis that has been caused as a result of the Coronavirus. Both will take lives, both will take livelihoods, and it’s incredibly important that we continue to focus on battling both of these enemies to Australia’s way of life.”

Governments lie, and this government lies absolutely.

Trust in democracy, as surveys clearly show, has been at catastrophically low levels for some time now.

The power grab we are now witnessing comes against against an already darkening society. Almost every single economic indicator was trending down, and many of the so-called Quiet Australians already feared a coming depression; even before they were driven onto the dole queues.

The array of rorts and government’s connivance with the corporate realm is so encyclopaedic, it should have provided journalists with enough material to jampack their bulletins and fill their pages every single day of the week.

Soon enough, one can only hope, it will; and angry, indignant books will decorate library bookshelves, their authors demanding to know how such a blatant manipulation of democracy for financial gain could have been allowed to hold sway. How a democracy in peril had been so heavily rorted it was a democracy no longer.

How a once optimistic country as optimistic no more, and everywhere you looked, another scam.

Turning public assets into private gain has reached new heights in Australia. The conservative government have a sour reputation as a pack of corporate crooks who have misused their political positions to plunder the public purse. Pretending to be a hero saving the nation from Covid-19 cannot conceal the truth.

Here’s just a few of the scandals of Morrison’s tenure:

Time and again the government, particularly under Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and then Treasurer Scott Morrison, resisted calls for a Royal Commission into the banking sector, until, faced with no choice, they proceeded in 2017. For a full year the public were exposed to tales of plutocratic misconduct, from charging fees for non-existent services to turning a blind eye to the money laundering for drug syndicates and terrorism financing.

Finally, one Friday in early 2019, the final report was handed to the government. Normally such reports are made publicly available immediately. The government held on to the report until Monday.

And on the back of a softer than expected report, bank shares surged $19 billion. On the face of it, this looked like the biggest market manipulation in the nation’s history; and the Big End of Town made yet another fortune plundering the nation. Exactly who got advance copies of the report we may never know.

As critics suggested, there was now a need for a royal commission into the royal commission.

Scott Morrison was always closely connected with the Very Big End of Town, and now suddenly the banks have been rehabilitated and are being gifted tens of billions of dollars of taxpayers money, under the guise of fiscal stimulus. They are expected to emerge from the coronavirus pandemic stronger than ever.

Then there is the privatising of visa processing, roundly criticised because it was being snaffled up by a close mate of both Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison.

Despite the myriad failures of privatisation, not least the disastrous sale of the nation’s energy networks, which has delivered dazzling profits to foreign multinationals at the expense of every citizen in this country, the government has pledged to auction yet another essential service, visa processing.

The privatisation of visas has the weight of money behind it, and a veritable gravy train of consultants and business interests to give it momentum. The value of the contract is commonly tipped as $1 billion with some estimates as high $3 billion.

Available on Amazon Kindle. Paperback available shortly.

Sometimes a person’s inner bile is writ large across their visage; so poisonous, so toxic, so deep has their inner corruption become, it suppurates out through their skin, the boils visible for all to see.

So it is with this government.

These people have been prepared to sacrifice the health of Australia’s inland river system on the pyre of their own greed.

They blame climate change. They blame the drought. They blame everyone and everything but themselves.

The stench of millions of dead fish, the rotting corpses of kangaroos and sheep, the missing birdlife, the farmers who can no longer farm, devastated indigenous peoples, an ancient, desecrated landscape, internationally significant wetlands nothing but dust bowls, all of this and more has been happening across Central Australia.

Decades of chronic government mismanagement and corporate greed have turned Australia’s most significant and extensive river system, the Murray-Darling, into a disaster of national and international significance.

As senior editor at The Canberra Times Jack Waterford put it, the dead and stinking fish are “a floating monument to greed, corruption, maladministration and disastrous environmental management.”

Historians will look back and wonder how it was that a country’s ruling elites could so savagely betray, so audaciously rob, their fellow countrymen. How integrity and decency were so easily abandoned. How they could with such blundering idiocy and staggering incompetence destroy the very place which had made them rich.

Why the population did not rise up even quicker than they did.

How a once optimistic country lost its way.

All of this destruction of the country has been done under the cover of Covid-19.

Officially there have been 19 deaths from coronavirus so far. There are normally between 1500 and 3000 deaths from the flu each year in Australia, according to the Influenza Specialist Group. With estimates ranging up to six million additional unemployed by year’s end, how many more people will die as a result of the ravages of the widespread poverty and unemployment being engineered by this government?

The evil that men do lives after them.

You do not need the gift of prophecy to know that future historians will view the Abbott–Turnbull–Morrison era as the worst period of governance in Australia’s history, a time when a terrible brutality was born.

Available on Amazon Kindle. Paperback available shortly.