Contributing editor-at-large Tess Lawrence introduces an article by Geoffrey Cousins on the controversial James Price Point gas hub. “There are merely a handful of men capable of instilling fear in the corporate badlands,” Tess writes — and Geoff Cousins is surely one of them.

(Image courtesy savethekimberley.com.)
THERE ARE merely a handful of men capable of instilling fear in the corporate badlands of those determined to rip the innards out of Australia’s earthscape for monetary reasons alone, ergo Woodside Petroleum’s indecent groping of Kimberley’s sacred Walmadan land – also known as James Price Point – near Broome in Western Australia.
Environmentalist, writer and company director Geoffrey Cousins is foremost among them; perhaps because he appears to be of their tribe but is not one of them.
The Goolarabooloo website says that what most of us know as James Price Point – named by colonists after a Board of Works Chief around 1909 – is known to them as Walmadan and named for
Walmadany…a tribal man who lived in this area at the beginning of the 20th century. He was head of his tribal group and was considered to be a powerful Maban man. Walmadany fiercely protected his people, their Jila (living water) and their land against strangers, invading tribes and Europeans. Walmadany’s clan shared their jila with the Ngumbarl people.
We know that Walmadany and his people’s spirits are still living in this area and are looking after Country. Use your “Liyan” (gut feeling) before setting off into this area as Walmadany may want to trick you or the Country may grab you leaving you lost or confused. To avoid trouble do not wander off alone.
Cousins has already lent his considerable influence to help halt Gunns in its Bell Bay pulp mill project in Tasmania; he now has Woodside and its now nervous chairman Michael Chaney, in his sights ― namely their mega billion dollar Browse Liquefied Natural Gas Hub.
Chaney also has a buttock on the chairman’s seat of the National Australia Bank.
In this comprehensive essay by Cousins, he recounts a meeting with Chaney that provides us with a fascinating and valuable insight into the different corporate ideologies of these two men.
One senses Chaney’s unease at being the lesser among equals.
The hollow posturings of the boardroom and corporate spin clearly hold no sway with Cousins.
Since Cousins first penned the following essay for the Global Mail, there have been even more exciting finds in the region.
Only last week, the ABC’s Catalyst program featured an exclusive report on dinosaur footprints in the Kimberley.
From the transcript:
But just as science begins to appreciate the full significance of the trackways, their security is threatened by a massive industrial development. For the time on television, in a Catalyst exclusive, you’re about to see dinosaur fossils that have never been revealed before. They’re found in rocky platforms along the pristine beaches north of Broome.
Mark Horstman (reporter):
All this is the Broome Sandstone. It runs for 200km along this coastline, up to 280m thick. Where it’s exposed between the low tide and the high tide, you find this incredible array of dinosaur footprints, wherever you look. Without seeing it with my own eyes, I would never have believed that this is possible.
And writing on the ABC website yesterday, environment journalist Sara Phillips reflected on the beauty of the site:
There is one aspect of the proposal that Woodside can’t mitigate: the view. James Price Point is undeniably beautiful. WA Premier Colin Barnett famously called Price’s Point an “unremarkable” piece of coastline. “I’m making the point that this is not the spectacular Kimberley coast that you see in picture postcards,” he said to [ABC] Four Corners. Really, have you had your eyes checked recently, Mr Barnett?
Premier Barnett more likely has had his eyes ‘ chequed.’ He certainly has his eyes on the money.
Last month in a disingenuous attempt to circumvent and appease increasing community revolt, both locally and internationally, WA Today’s Rania Spooner wrote that the Premier had announced a Bill
‘…to limit the use of the precinct to gas processing only, to rehabilitate and remediate the land after the precinct is closed and to return the land to traditional owners at the end of the precinct life.’
Sure, Premier Barnett, just like we did with the nuclear testing in South Australia’s Maralinga?
If anything, the Premier’s announcement has increased growing anger and distress. Last Friday night, more than 6,000 people gathered in Melbourne’s Federation Square for a free Save the Kimberley Concert organised by The Wilderness Society.
The John Butler Trio and Clare Bowditch were also joined by videolink with Missy Higgins, in the States and campaign stalwart Bob Brown, former Greens leader spoke to the gathering.
Meanwhile back in Broome on the Hands Off Country website, Red Hand acknowledged the support of local and city cousins and posted:
‘Thank you, to all the volunteers, who gave their time and hearts through conversation, leafleting etc. We, the Broome community formed a massive bond last night with the people of Melbourne and it felt like a rising tide.’
Red Hand is right.
Despite being confronted with the full force and influence of Woodside and its bedfellows, dissenting communities are fighting might with right.
The way the Broome Community ‘No Gas’ Campaign page acknowledged its supporters says it all:
We would like to say a very big thank you to the following businesses and individuals for supporting the Broome Community No Gas Campaign and website:
Kris Harburn – Gardener Extraordinaire - 0408 922 085
Eclipse Computers – Leading the way in IT – Phone 08 9192 2832
Cable Beach Electrical Service – The one with the ‘NO LNG’ number plate – Phone 08 9192 2336
You can find more information about our friends in the campaign at these websites:
http://www.goolarabooloo.org.au/
http://handsoffcountry.blogspot.com.au/
http://www.environskimberley.org.au/

(Image courtesy goolarabooloo.org.au)
Campaigners against JPP know they have a hard fight ahead as that they are up against merciless corporate behemoths that are nowhere near as benign as the dinosaur footsteps in the sandstone, and who are indifferent to both the sacred and the profane.
The toll that would be taken on James Price Point, is not right; the injury to the Earth’s skin too great. We should keep Woodside far from the Walmadan crowd.
*****
The following is the article by Geoffrey Cousins, first published in The Global Mail on 19 July 2012 ― the week Woodside Petroleum’s plan to build a $40 billon gas hub in the Kimberley was approved by the WA Government:
The Kimberley: The Right Thing Or Ka-Ching?
I am sitting in a nondescript meeting room in the Sydney business district, facing two men. One is Michael Chaney, chairman of National Australia Bank and Woodside Petroleum, one of the doyens of Australian business — some would say the doyen. The other is the then-CEO of Woodside, Don Voelte, a voluble American.
Voelte is running true to form, and words pour forth from him in a never-ending stream about the benefits of Woodside’s plans to industrialise the Kimberley and bring rivers of milk and honey to the mouths of the Aboriginal communities who live there. Chaney doesn’t speak at this meeting in October, 2010. He fixes me with what I assume is his steeliest gaze. He seems pleased with it.
Even when Voelte (who in late June was appointed chief executive of Seven West Media) launches into a scurrilous and defamatory attack on an Aboriginal leader I have been meeting with, or “getting into bed with” as the good Don puts it, Chaney sits there silently. He doesn’t interject; he doesn’t question his CEO for describing this person as “a criminal and a drunk”. He just sits there.
But suddenly the distinguished face comes to life, and a finger is pointed at me, jabbed towards me in fact, with these words almost hurled across the table:
“You are acting unethically.”
This comes as somewhat of a surprise. We have never met before, and whilst I wasn’t expecting to be presented with Woodside’s Citizen of the Year Award, as I am a strident opponent of its planned massive gas hub at James Price Point in the Kimberley, nor was I expecting my ethical behaviour to be brought into question.
Not even at the height of the Gunns battle in Tasmania over its proposed pulp mill in the Tamar Valley, where accusations flowed fast and loose, had this claim been thrown at me — although just about every other negative remark had — including the then Tasmanian Premier’s comment that I wasn’t welcome in his state.
I ask Chaney to explain. He takes up the opportunity with relish.
“You are trying to deny the Aborigines in the Kimberley the benefits we will bring to them,” is his response.
Ah, yes. This is the cry of the mining companies wherever they want to go in Australia where Indigenous people live or have ever lived.
“We will bring benefits that only our activities can bring. These will be employment, health and educational benefits that will help to solve the enduring problems of Aboriginal communities.”

Woodside CEO, Michael Chaney (image courtesy givingwest.org.au).
So the issues the miners put front and centre aren’t the obvious environmental risks ― it’s really all about helping people.
Woodside, and Chaney in particular, have perfected this piece of sophistry; perhaps they’ve come to believe it. And they are wholeheartedly supported in it by the West Australian Government. When Premier Colin Barnett was asked why these benefits wouldn’t still flow to the Jabirr Jabirr and Goolarabaloo people if the gas hub was located somewhere in WA other than the sensitive Kimberley coast, he replied:
“No. They won’t get them unless it’s here.”
Is there really some government policy that ties royalties or taxes from a particular site to the surrounding region? No, quite the opposite in fact. The WA government’s Royalties to Regions programme mandates that funds can be moved to where they’re needed. Royalties can be applied to any use the government chooses, which seems self-evident but the policy states it anyway.
Strangely, one of the first applications of this initiative is to use royalties from Rio Tinto and BHP’s operations in the Pilbara to build the Fiona Stanley Hospital in Perth. According to the Premier, the Kimberley is where the funds are desperately needed, which is true, but somehow they find their way to Perth.
More than 40 years ago, WA Premier Charles Court made comments similar to Barnett’s when the Pilbara was opened up to mining — that the local Aboriginal communities would be the beneficiaries; that their lives would change for the better.
What, then, are the facts of Aboriginal life in the Pilbara compared to other areas? This is particularly relevant since the region’s largest city, Karratha, is the home of Woodside. If they haven’t delivered all these benefits there, I would have thought it’s unlikely they’ll keep their promises anywhere else.
The Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, at the Australian National University, published a study in 2005 entitled Indigenous People and the Pilbara Mining Boom. A line of this report reads as follows:
‘Despite 40 years of sustained economic development in the Pilbara region, the labour force status of Indigenous Pilbara residents has barely altered.’
The report examines in detail aspects of Indigenous health, education and employment in this region and compares them to other parts of WA and the state as a whole. It points out that life expectancy in the Pilbara for males is 52-55 years and for females is 60-63 years (current life expectancy for an Australian male is 79-80 and female, 84, according to the latest figures from the Bureau of Statistics). The ANU report goes on to say:
‘If we add to this the fact of relatively high Indigenous morbidity rates commencing in young adulthood and rising throughout the prime working ages, then a pattern emerges of severe physical constraints on the ability of many in the community to engage in meaningful and sustained economic activity.’
As far as the promised hospitals and other health and educational facilities are concerned, the report states:
‘Among the issues underlying health status, this study emphasises the significance of ongoing backlogs in achieving environmental health infrastructure [and] the need for improved outcomes from education and training.’
Even if all of this were not true, it’s the fundamental premise that seems false. The concept that you now receive a good education in Australia, or adequate healthcare, if you happen to live in a valuable mining area, whether you are Indigenous or not, is so preposterous as to appear to need no reply. But perhaps not in the Premier’s mind. Nor in the Federal minister Martin Ferguson’s mind, as he has made similar statements. And obviously not in Michael Chaney’s mind.
“You don’t understand,” he says to me. “My family has been involved with Aboriginal issues for years. My brother Fred, you must know, has had a lifelong commitment.”
I do know this. As a Federal senator, Fred Chaney had a long track record of involvement in those areas. But my brother is one of the world’s leading authorities on the treatment of pain. Few of his patients come to me for advice. I would have liked to quote Michael Chaney these words from Patrick Dodson in his Inaugural Mahatma Gandhi Oration:
“In the midst of the mining boom many Aboriginal people are finding immediate relief from the poverty besetting many of our communities by gaining employment in the mining industry. But I question whether in the long term our participation in unbridled exploitation is not in fact adding to the diminishment of our custodial responsibilities to humanity, global sustainability and resilience.”
These words were not spoken by Pat Dodson until much later — not, in fact, until January 30, 2012. But they destroy the short-term promises of the mining snake-oil salesmen in two elegant sentences. As the father of Reconciliation and a person who lives these issues rather than reading about them, Pat Dodson may make some modest claim to believability on the matter.
But Chaney presses on:
“And my daughter works at Kalumburu — I suppose you’ve never heard of it?”
I explain that my wife and I had dinner there with the last remaining Benedictine monk a few years ago. I don’t say how devastated we were to see the appalling conditions in this place, the most northerly settlement in Western Australia, or to learn that it had been a prosperous and healthy community since its founding in 1908, before the Kalumburu road was dozered through the 270 kilometres to the south to join up with the Gibb River Road. There doesn’t seem any point, since Chaney is clearly annoyed I’ve ever been there at all.
Instead I ask about other matters. Why not build this massive industrial plant somewhere else? It’s said to be the largest gas hub anywhere in the world, although in October of 2009, Premier Barnett said:
“This is not an industrial complex as some would try and describe it. It is basically a large refrigerator.”
Some refrigerator.
The land area for the site is 2,500 hectares, with a further 1,000 hectares of marine zone. Presently, the largest gas hub in the world is Qatargas, which has an output of 42 million tonnes per annum. The JPP project is scheduled to produce 50 million tonnes per annum. It will also produce 39 million tonnes of carbon dioxide each year — more than the annual output of the country of New Zealand. The problem for Barnett is that he also said on April 13, 2010 at an oil conference in Houston,
“In every sense the biggest game in town is the development of mega projects for the export of LNG. These projects, both existing and proposed, dwarf any other industrial projects in Australia.”
Politicians always like to please an audience.
So, why not pipe this gas to the Pilbara, an area already pockmarked by mining excavations and processing operations? Why not use a floating platform, as Shell is doing at its Prelude Field in the Browse Basin? No environmental groups have voiced any opposition to such an initiative, despite the cry from the mining companies that nothing will ever satisfy them.
Not viable. Not possible. Can’t be done. One by one, the negative responses roll out.
But I’m a businessman, not a professional tree hugger, so I’d like to know why? Why are the other land-based alternatives not viable? JP Morgan published a report in 2009 saying there were a number of these sites that were economically viable. Out of date, irrelevant, is the response. Why not the floating option like Shell, as the James Price Point gas is likewise in the Browse Basin? Not possible because of the weather,
Chaney replies. Different weather conditions prevail in this area that would make it dangerous for workers.
These responses were puzzling at the time, but more so later. I meet with Shell, and I’m told by the senior executive responsible for their investment in this proposed project that there’s no technical reason a floating platform can’t be used at James Price Point. I then check the Government approval documents given to Shell for the Prelude Field, and find that one of the conditions for development is that the platform must be able to withstand a one-in-ten-thousand year weather event. The weather at the Woodside field must be something to behold.
Then why the insistence on James Price Point as the site? Because the State and Federal governments wrote that into the lease renewal documents, the Shell executive says.
Is that common? I ask.
“I’ve never seen it before,” is the response.
Later in 2011, Merrill Lynch publishes a 44-page report on possible alternative sites, including the Pilbara, and also concludes that there are several viable options. The Australian newspaper reports this conclusion.
I meet with the Federal environment minister, Tony Burke. I ask him if he has read the Merrill Lynch report. He’s never heard of it. I suggest it is a relevant document for a minister to see when it deals with a project awaiting his approval. He asks a staff member, who is attending this Sydney meeting by video link from Canberra, to get a copy. The staff member replies that it isn’t publicly available. I point out that the press have already reported on it. Silence from Canberra, followed by a curt instruction from the minister to put the report on his desk the next day.
None of this is encouraging, but plenty of other events are. Unless the local community supports a cause, it’s difficult in these environmental fights to win the battle.
The Broome community, a magic mix of Aboriginal, Chinese, Malay and European families all melded together, initially seemed to be stunned and uncertain over this issue. The first time I visited Broome to give a view on the subject, they would only meet in the garden of a private home.
But many things have brought a change. When more than 60 riot police, in training for CHOGM, flew in from Perth with the capital city media in tow, the local community was unsettled to say the least. When the riot squad, now travelling with a reality TV show film crew as well, arrived on Manari Road at James Price Point to remove a group of protesters who were blocking access to the construction site, including a number of prominent Aboriginal leaders, the disquiet lifted several notches. Late that day, after the media and the reality television program had left, the riot squad returned, formed a flying wedge, and smashed the protesters off the road.
When I visited the site a short time later I spoke to several of these people, including an elderly Aboriginal woman who said she’d been knocked down into a roadside ditch. While we were speaking, we were constantly filmed by private security personnel employed by Woodside. Every car that passes their checkpoint, set up on a public road, is filmed — every number plate, every face. On a public road. In Australia.
Imagine if this occurred in Sydney or Melbourne, or even Perth. Every citizen being filmed and recorded by employees of a division of Halliburton hired by a mining company. The security goons refused to speak, refused to give their names, refused to respond in any way. They followed us up Manari Road in their vehicles with reflective windows, wearing their sunglasses with reflective lenses. Is this Australia now?
I thought not, so when we returned to Broome, I went to visit a senior police officer. Another anonymous conference room, another unfulfilling response.
I asked him why the police allowed these private security people to patrol and film on a public road. He replied, “Well, you can film them, can’t you?”
I asked him why they were allowed to block access to public land. The response was, “Ah, yes, well there we are in uncharted waters.”
Finally, I asked him whether he had taken paramedics or made any other provision for medical assistance when he escorted the riot squad out to James Price Point.
“Why would I?” was the response.
“Because it’s a remote place, and there’s no way to get medical help for an injured person. And you knew the riot police were planning to charge them in a flying wedge.”
At this point, I was asked to leave ― not politely, but not with any physical aggression either.
The sea breezes of Cable Beach blow away some of the unclean feeling of those encounters, but it’s still easy to wake in the night and see those smug faces pointing cameras at me and refusing to speak. Where am I? Haiti?
No, I am on Cable Beach and it’s the next day and 5,000 people are there also. One third of the entire population of Broome ha come down to the sea to join in a gentle protest against the gas hub ruining their way of life. The Pigram Brothers sing, and Rob Hirst from Midnight Oil, and there’s not an unhappy note from anyone.
Except maybe the police, who sit in the sand hills because they don’t know what else to do. The singers are on a boat, so technically no one needs a licence to be there. The riot squad has a day off.
What am I doing expending all this time and energy on a place Premier Barnett describes as “a rocky wasteland”? He also says, “James Price Point has a beach, not remarkable”. Are these remarks reminiscent of former Tasmanian Premier Robin Gray’s description of the Franklin River ,when the dam protests were on, as just a “leech-ridden” ditch? They are to me. If you’ve rafted the Franklin, you’d never allow it to be dammed. If you’ve driven or flown or cruised the Kimberley, you couldn’t allow it to be industrialised. Not any part of it — rocky, flat, mountainous or otherwise. Not the land or the sea.
And the sea here is as unique as the land. The area off James Price Point is one of the largest migatory areas for humpback whales. Not to mention other remarkable sea creatures, such as dugongs, massive rays ― maybe marine life as yet undiscovered. I do mention the whales to Michael Chaney.
“Nonsense, it’s not a major whale area,” he says.
Really? But what about the Curtin University report that says it is.
“It’s rubbish”, he replies. “I spoke to the Vice Chancellor. They’re ashamed of it.”
I try another tack. “How about the report of sightings of whales and calves over many years at James Price Point by the two naturalists who live there?”
“Never heard of it,” says Chaney.
It was the Commonwealth Government’s Humpback Whale Recovery Plan (2005 to 2010) that states that a critical habitat for whales in Australia includes “the southern Kimberley between Broome and the northern end of Camden Sound”. This critical habitat zone as described in that plan includes James Price Point. I can only assume this document is also unknown to Michael Chaney.
It’s a rare talent to be able to dismiss whales with a wave of the hand. Most people can see them pretty easily. Most people who’ve been to James Price Point have.
If this massive gas hub is built at this site, a port has to be built as well. Because of the extreme tidal movements in the Kimberley, an area of dredging stretching over six kilometres out to sea has to be maintained for the life of the plant — approximately 50 years. Woodside describes the effects of this dredging in its annual report as “temporary”. Approximately 1,500 large ships have to come and go each year, and innumerable support vessels. Even the most intrepid whale might be slightly disturbed by this, the constant dredging and the use of sonar devices.
But while the Federal Government is busy telling the Japanese not to kill whales, it is remarkably silent on this aspect of their procreation, or indeed their simple enjoyment of life. Death, apparently, is what matters. Politically speaking.
So, every time I think it’s not worth the fight, the facts get in the way. The Kimberley is the last remaining pristine savannah region on the planet. The oceans are the cleanest and have the most complex and rare marine environment on earth. The cultural heritage and rock art are beyond any measure of their worth. It’s obvious why you’d try to keep them.
But still people ask:
“Do you own land there? Do you have shares in some tourist operation? Are you trying to nobble the Government?”
No. No. And no. I’d like to ask why these cynical questions are put to me, but I don’t. You can’t afford to get angry. Let the other side take the anger route. They’ll wear themselves out and trip over their own hubris sooner or later. And in this Woodside issue, they are. They’ve lost the support of the Broome community. Now they lose in court.
On 6 December 2011, in the Supreme Court of WA, the judge rules that the WA government has been sloppy in describing the land it is trying to compulsorily acquire for this project and the Court strikes down all of its efforts thus far. The process can, and likely will, start again — indeed, in June, another traditional owner of James Price Point lodged a fresh legal challenge, prompting Woodside to pause site works. Last month, it was revealed that four of the five board members of the state’s Environmental Protection Authority had conflicts of interest that disqualified them from the deliberation. The minister delayed the release of the decision until this week, when on the say so of EPA chairman Paul Vogel, the project was approved with 29 conditions. The Wilderness Society immediately raised the prospect of a legal challenge to the EPA approval. State and Federal approvals are yet to come. All of this involves time and uncertainty. The financial markets hate both.
And they express their growing dislike for this project. In January 2012, Macquarie Bank publishes a report about the project headed “Has it missed the boat?” The proposed joint venture partners, including Shell, BHP Billiton, Chevron and BP, have also expressed reservations at various times. So the Woodside CEO tries to head off any further uncertainty by stating that if any of these companies choose not to take up their allocations, Woodside will buy them out.
Really? Just like that? The CEO of a public company would change the entire structure of the biggest non-government industrial project in the country’s history, without any reference to shareholders or anyone else? Now that’s corporate governance for you.
But what to do if after all this you didn’t want to go ahead? If you are the board of Woodside, how could you get out of this project altogether or move it to a more acceptable site, without looking as if you’ve suffered a loss at the hands of a ragtag group of activists? Would you wait and fight it to the death or seize the day and somehow turn it to your advantage?
Woodside isn’t a company like Gunns once was. It is stronger financially; in my opinion it has a more experienced and better credentialed board; it has less political baggage. At the moment. But as I see it, all these strengths are at risk in this one project and can disappear in a surprisingly short time. Once confidence in a company begins to crumble, chairmen can become casualties, reputations can suffer, shareholder value can erode in a flash.
So if you’re smart, you move. You take the initiative, you gain kudos for choosing the right path and engage your opponents instead of keeping them at arm’s length. You come out of the bunker before the walls crash around you.
This is where Woodside is right now. It’s a fascinating dilemma — the sort that is increasingly common in business today. Ignore community concerns, plough ahead with hubris and contempt for contrary views, and you can end up with a new board apologising for the sins of the old before you know it.
But it’s a tight-knit community in WA and half-a-dozen people think they run the country. No one makes this clearer than Premier Barnett when, on 1 February 2012, mining magnate Gina Rinehart makes a raid on Fairfax stock. He says:
“Little old Wesfarmers bought Coles, Kerry Stokes has bought Channel Seven nationally, now maybe Gina Rinehart’s going to own Fairfax.”
He could have pointed out also that Michael Chaney is the former CEO of Wesfarmers, Kerry Stokes is a major supplier of mining equipment and controls the only newspaper group in WA and Gina Rinehart is a vocal and relentless opponent of many restrictions on mining companies. Instead, Barnett sums up the influence of the group in this way:
“The rest of Australia, get used to it: this is where the money is.”
So which path would Woodside take? It could select a new site, it could edge away from responsibility by selling down its shareholding, or it could stand up to the Government and say that the lease renewal conditions were wrong. In January, the answer comes: Woodside announces an auction would be held for part of its shareholding. In June, Woodside sells 15 per cent of its stake to the Japanese consortium involving Mitsui and Mitsubishi for AUD2 billion.
“We have a commitment to take James Price Point through to a certain decision point,” Woodside’s chief executive and managing director Peter Coleman told the company’s annual general meeting the day after the MIMI deal was announced.
Some people think this is the end of James Price point as the site; others aren’t so sure.
So what can you do if the owners, irresponsibly, decide to press ahead at James Price Point? Not much really. After all, a lot of people will make a lot of money and the country will benefit from all the taxes and royalties. So say the cynics, but not the people of goodwill who fight these battles to their considerable cost: the lawyers who donate their time to fight the court battles while the companies use shareholders’ funds and the governments use taxpayers’, or the protesters who camp by the roads or climb the trees and live off hope and a love of wild places, or people in the local communities who risk being ostracised because they might take a dollar or two out of someone’s wallet in order to save a way of life, or the volunteers in any number of environmental groups who suffer abuse from many quarters.
Is it possible a major Australian company like Woodside would just walk away from its responsibilities in an issue such as this? It’s possible because companies have tried to engineer ways to dodge difficult issues in the past, but I would like to think not here. It is increasingly unlikely that the project will proceed in the Kimberley.
The gas will be piped to the Pilbara or the Northern Territory as logic suggests. So surely Woodside could take the initiative and lead the change. I will applaud them if they do. My main aim for 2012 is to sit across that table again from Michael Chaney and be able to say: “You’re acting ethically, Michael. Congratulations.”









52 Comments
Cousins of The #Kimberleys and a price too high. #JamesPricePoint #GasHub #Woodside http://t.co/71whL5If
Hi Tess,
This story (from my wanderings in exile) might be of interest.
In a little NZ (same one as where the Qld government sent me death threats, and where the snipers decorated our kitchen with bullet holes, back in 18 something, the local Maori chiefs donated a large parcel of land which was to be used for religious and educational purposes.
Well, within a generation, gold was discovered – and “education and religious instruction” quickly went out the window. The new settlers wasted no time in establishing a booze and brothels economy on the land – filling it with pubs, dance halls, brothels, and workshops.
When I was there, one of the last remnants of those rowdy mining days was a huge booze barn – basically just a mega swill hole, with a bar at one end, filled with lost soulstrying to drown the emptiness of their lives. The atmosphere reminded me of the old 1950′s six o’clock closing pubs – where there was a rush to consume as much as possible before the 6pm deadline.
In the time we were around that town, THREE (!) managers (of the booze barn) in a row, committed suicide.
Make your own mind up as to whether the stampede for mining profits, and the refusal to work in with the wishes of the local tribes, is still being paid for with the suicides – and the alcoholism..
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, apart from giving us all yet another inkling of your extraordinary life, you raise some salient and serious issues for which there are few easy answers.
I recall people telling me about those early closures and the guzzling and I believe it was called ‘ The Six O’Clock Swill.’
WOODSIDE AND WA GOVT COLLUDE TO KEEP INFORMATION FROM THE PEOPLE
Read more from THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY.
‘Over the weekend, media reports announced that Woodside had asked the State government to withdraw expert advice about possible breaches of Aboriginal heritage laws, in a letter dated September 5th, 2011. The West Australian government complied with this request and buried advice about the significance of the songline along the Dampier Peninsular, including sites within the dunes at James Price Point.’
http://www.wilderness.org.au/campaigns/kimberley/kimberley-protectors-again-stop-work-at-james-price-point
Yes Tess, the possible hexes or disfavour from the spiritual powers around indigenous people is an interesting issue.
Some people would surmise that none of it is real, but in NZ, the colonial government so feared those powers that they put a bounty, dead or alive on Maori tohungas. (The word might be translated as medicine man, witch doctor, spiritual healer, or spiritual warrior, sepending on the slant you want to take – I will explain the origin of the term a couple of paragraphs ahead).
The “deal” was “Just Bring in the body, and you get your money, no questions asked”.
I used the term “colonial government” very loosely – the Tohunga Suppression Act (ie the dead or alive bounty), was still actively in operation in 1930′s NZ.
[The word Cohen is a Jewish surname. It means priest - ie it is the word used in the Hebrew Bible for priest. When JC was a boy and "went to church" in an Aramaic speaking synagogue, he would have heard the term in Aramaic - as Kahuna.
Kahuna is still the term used in Hawaii. (We tend to know it more from surfing, eg "the Big Kahuna". Further south in the Pacific, Kahuna becomes Tahuna. And coming more to the south west (eg NZ), Tahuna becomes Tohunga.]
Remarkably, the Tohungas, who have powers that still frighten the government here, hold Australian aboriginal spirituality in great respect – to the point of almost being in awe of some of the stuff the Aborigines can do.
This is obviously a far cry from the sort of dismissive, almost contemptuous attitude given to Aboriginal culture and spirituality in our corporate boardrooms.
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, beautifully put. And in an earlier comment I posted a link to THE WILDNERNESS SOCIETY and an article they have
about WOODSIDE and the WA GOVERNMENT colluding and withholding from us, vital information about the indigenous significance of WALMADAN/JAMES PRICE POINT.
Very thought provoking article. Most people I speak to assume that large projects are regulated and closely watched. Also, they seem to believe that any impact on flora and fauna (Us included) will be as minimized as possible. Job creation trumps all else, it would seem. Job retention & sustainability? Actual quality of life? These are trailing in the dust. Too much immediacy in our culture, maybe?
Broadly speaking, an economy is made Land, Labour and Resource. It appears the giants of the resource sector and the governments that support them have focused entirely on the last one and forgotten the first two. That seems somewhat shortsighted to me, but then I’m just some guy.
Dear BSKINNER, you are certainly more than ‘ some guy ‘ and one of the many things that struck me about this fine GEOFF COUSINS essay, was how MICHAEL CHANEY reacted to him when he asked pertinent questions in the interview.
It’s obvious that CHANEY, WOODSIDE and the WA GOVERNMENT for that
matter, care nothing for public accountability and transparency.
They have been allowed to get away with it for too long and we ought not to tolerate this nonsense of withholding information from the people.
We are entitled to it and we should persist in demanding that they behave ethically and practice good governance.
Thanks for raising the points you did in your comment. And the way you’ve clarified that economic trinity is very helpful.
Thanks for publishing this IA, well worth the read.
This sorry episode is just another example of how these people get to the high positions they are in – sociopathy, the lack of a concience. Entirely disgusting.
Chaney is a disgrace (what is it with that surname, even if it is spelt slightly different?) and should be castigated incessantly at evey opportunity. As for Voelte, well, hopefully he goes home soon. True corporate yank there, not a shred of decency to be seen or heard.
Maybe one day, when there is nothing left on this earth to plunder, nothing beautiful left to see, nothing remarkable to witness, maybe then we’ll have the last laugh. What a shameful day that will be.
P.S. TerraAustralis – are you ever going to write an autobiography? I’d lay money on it being unable to be put down. Keep ‘em coming!
BSkinner; “Too much immediacy in our culture, maybe?”
I think you’ve nailed it in one.
And like Tess says, it may seem like we are “just some guy” or “just one person” but, together, we are much more.
Dear MILES Q, thanks for your support and comment.
If I recall rightly, VOELTE is now heading up another organisation.
Many of these FIFO corporate chiefs ( whether local or not ) have no real and emotional understanding of what our lands means to us, Indigenous and non-Indigenous alike.
And people like CHANEY clearly couldn’t care less.
I for one, am grateful that GEOFFREY COUSINS does care. And so do all the other wonderful human beings mentioned, who are fighting this disgraceful ecovandalism, and I would encourage us all to check out some of their websites that are listed in the prelude to the fine COUSINS essay, and to leave a word of encouragement and support and get involved.
WOODSIDE and their cohorts are doing everything to keep the dispute ‘ contained ‘ locally, given that they have the WA Government in their corner.
* And about TERRA AUSTRALIS and a book – spot on!
Dear TESS LAWRENCE, I find most disturbing Michael Chaney’s reaction to reasonable, direct questions. He doesn’t even use graceful obfustication, as you might expect. Instead, he is arrogant bordering on aggressive. That he feels secure enough to say such things on public record speaks volumes, and I for one hope more people take note of his tone, and that more people like Geoff Cousins ask a LOT more reasonable, direct questions.
Dear BSKINNER, I think MICHAEL CHANEY feels threatened by the likes of GEOFF COUSINS, who has his number and is not going to cop the usual facile and insulting responses.
Hi TESS and MILES – a slightly longer post – and thanks for the good wishes:
Yes, I am am working on the books (plural) – I think I have enough “good read” level material for more than a single book. I will have to “fictionalise” the stories a bit – mainly the national security related stuff – and use composite or fictionalised characters for some of the political figures and bent judges – who would probably want to sue me for libel, or do much worse, if I told the truth about them.
Getting back to the theme of how Australia, and our big mining companies, deal with Aborigina culture, I will summarise a couple more personal stories, mainly as background to a plug for what we (will explain in the coming paragraphs) hope to do – when we either, bring Aboriginals to NZ for study, or send Maori teams as educators to Aboriginal communities in Australia.
So, stories first:
My daughter was 6 years old when the WA police came knocking on our door. The old WA police force has some decent guys in it, as you will see. They apologised to me for what they had been ordered to do. The warrant they had for me, was issued at the orders of the judge I referred to in the last 7 or 8 posts to the Alan Jones and Jill Meagher article – re the Claremont killings, and the police and government protection about the self described “violent sexual predator” in both Perth and Melbourne (http://www.independentaustralia.net/2012/business/media-2/jill-meagher-and-alan-jones/ ).
The police already had the warrant for me. They told me it was valid for 60 days, and that they were not going to act on it until the 59th day. They told me the judge had organised my arrest, and the certain guilty verdict on what the police knew were faked charges, and that my planned imprisonment was a done deal.
They told me that my daughter was also a target. The same judge had arranged for her to be seized, and handed over to a group of “carers”, with whom she would never be safe. The police did not spell out the words “paedophile ring”, but the meaning was pretty clear. They recommended, and said they hoped I would follow the advice, that both my daughter and I be well and truly out of their jurisdiction by the time the 59th day came around.
The police were not threatening in their manner – it was genuine concern. They were under orders to arrest me immediately, but opted not to do so. They actually came back to check on us the day before we were due to leave WA, just to check that we really were going.
Anyway, cutting out a lot of detail, my daughter and I ended up, several months later, in NZ.
Roughly 800 years ago (I don’t know much re the details), there was a prophecy given in Hawaii re a major change (for the better) in the lives of the Hawaiian people. On the day we left Perth, ie soon after that final visit to check on us by the WA police, the Hawaiian Royal family announced that the fulfillment of the prophecy was beginning that day. (We were in Hawaii before we settled in NZ, but I will skip over that part of the tale).
In New Zealand, Maori elders had had visions of a Pakeha (the word actually means “pig”, but it is in common use in NZ to mean European) who would come to them with a litte girl, and teach them the meaning of their myths and legends – after which, their lives would change for the better. In almost identical format, the same vision was given to elders in different parts of New Zealand.
So, semi “on the run” and hitching on an NZ road, we were spotted, and recoggnised, by one of the guys who had had one of those visions. They hid us and protected us on Maori land for months. It was wild country, with steep mountains. While we lived in a tent in those mountains, we had a (Maori) ex-enforcer from the Sydney underworld about a kilometer above us – ie guarding the approach to our tent.
Largely inspired by those visions (of me and my daughter), our Maori hosts and protectors taught me, in detail, a lot of their mythology and legends.
Murdoch University runs (or they did when I was there – courtesy of Professprs Jim Warren and Geoffrey Bolton) very good programs in History and Asian Studies. I had completed about 85% of a degree in Asian Studies and History at Murdoch, and had learned stuff in that program that jived with some of the oral history the Maoris taught me.
I have a degree in Physics and Pure Mathematics, and was a former uni lecturer in Computer Science and Information Processing –including high end of the scale mainframe databases – a skill which proved useful when I got my mits on some ancient paperwork, hidden away in NZ (another story).
My good Australian education kicked in – and buried in those Maori “myths”, I recognised (on top of the oral history stuff), things my Maori hosts had no idea they had – eg some advanced knowledge of physics, and a summary of the structure of the Periodic Table.
In the years since then, we have worked to build an indigenous education and study program. A lot of it was done on dirt floors, or in old caravans on Maori land, and teaching with sticks and stones as aids – ie with none of the things like whiteboards and projectors. On some levels, the progress has been embarassingly slow, but on another level, we have achieved something wonderful – ie genuinely advanced spiritual and scientific knowledge is now in Maori hands.
As with any indigenous culture under the after effects of “colonisation”, there are the usual massive problems to be overcpne – poor health and living conditions, despair and suicide amongst the youth, alcohol problems, domestic violence, poverty, ack of literacy and numeracy etc.
But we are optimistic re the future, and re what we are doing. And I think the NZ govt would be relieved if and when we manage to lower the crime and violence rate.
We have built a big spiritual and ethics/morality component into the program – drawing in part, from some of those ancients documents I got to study whilest I was to quote Ronald Biggs “on the run” – and also drawing on the. links between science and the Polynesian “myths”.
Based on our experience, in NZ I would guesstimate that only about 10% of students from an indigenous culture will really succeed on a purely western style education – they, and their families, need a more integrated program.
Assuming we achieve the results in NZ that we expect to, we plan to “export” the program to Hawaii, and (especially dear to me), to Aboriginal communities in Australia – both urban and “geographically remote”.
For obvious reasons (my “Canberra and Perth enforced” prolonged education in Polynesian mythology), I now know more about Polynesian culture than Aboriginal culture – but in the limited Aboriginal material I do know, I can see some of the same physics and advanced knowledge held by other indigenous cultures.
Based on what I learned at Murdoch University, and on what I learned in NZ, our conventional western history of indigenous cultures is ridiculously inaccurate. Which puts your average mining executive in a headspace where he has zero prospect of understanding or helping an Aboriginal community. (Some of our Maori elders/scholars should probably be running seminars re dealing with and understanding indigenous cultures for executives from the likes of BHP and Woodside – I believe it will be happening within 5 – 6 years].
We only survived (snipers, home invasions and all that) because of the protection we received from the Maoris. Initially, the education program was partly a way of thanking them for saving our lives, but it has taken on a life of its own now – and we, and a few backers and supporters from around the world, have great hopes for it.
And we have great hopes that we will use it to improve the lives of Australia’s Aborigines – something, I think Australia genuinely needs, and wants to see. We have chucked , over the past 40 years, squillions of dollars into Aborigina; welfare, with, in my opinion, very little bang for the buck. I think the intention was right, but the programs were destined to deliver limited results. If we can demonstrate, with real and measurable results in NZ (eg lowe crime rates, better education results, reduced suicide rates etc) that we have something that works better, we will start drum beating re exporting the same program to Australia.
[I probably should be devoting more time to things like the writing that pay the bills, but the scholars and education programs have become something of a passion]..
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, not surprised you’re actually working on several books given some of your experiences that you’ve recounted in this and other comments on IA.
I should do (I have enough material for one) a whole book on the government-corporate-courts culture in Perth, and how bent and perverted it is. When you understand how “subject to blackmail” certain members of Perth’s “establishment” are, many of the insane/absurd decisions made in Perth boardrooms, and decisions by the WA government, fall into place.
WA mining is a huge component of the Australian economy – and sadly, Perth’s “financial elite” have been so compromised, that it may as well be Lucifer, him-, or her-self (we are gender non-discriminatory on IA!), calling the shots along Hay St and St George’s Terrace.
When former Premier Brian Burke was gaoled, it was intended as a message to all and sundry — that even the Premiership, and Vatican connections (he was Australian ambassador to the Holy See) were not enough to protect anyone. “So, the rest of youze, better put ya heads down, and just shut up about what ya know!”
(The successful cover-up (er, Royal Commission) over WA Inc was a whitewash of what really happened. When you know the true picture, you start to understand why a Perth fishing boat was blown out of the water in the Persian Gulf. The whitewash/cover-up is still going on.)
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, curiouser and curiouser……….
Yes, TESS VERY CURIOUS — a Perth fishing boat sails out of Fremantle, and then gets nuked out of the ocean by a military jet in the Persian Gulf.
And nobody in the WA media shows even a hint of curiosity.
“Oh, ya know, it was just one of them fanatic moslem pilots going troppo with a missile!”
Yeah, Right!
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, who owned the fishing boat and what happened to all on board ? And who owned the Jet ?
Hi TESS,
I am writing this from memory, so I can’t guarantee my 100% accuracy, but from memory. . .
The fishing boat was owned by one of the Perth fishing companies – based in Fremantle, I think.. (I remember the CEO or Managing Director talking to the media after the attack.)
I think ALL the crew (ie an Australian crew – or what was supposed to have been an Australian fishing crew) were killed.
I think the fighter jet was Iranian, but it may have been Iraqi. It was one of those two.
It should have been a BIG story (ie a group of Australians being killed in a missile attack from an air-force jet in the Middle East) , but the Perth media down-played it, and I suspect it barely made it into the east coast media.
In theory, DFAT and the PM should have been chucking all sorts of protests at the relevant embassy in Canberra, but IF (a big if!), that happened, I don’t recall it getting any press coverage.
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, what was an Australian fishing boat doing in the Persian Gulf- and do you recall the year ?
Hi TESS,
I recall the missile attack happening during the height of those heady America’s Cup and WA Inc days in Perth — ie ’86 through to early ]87, but I could be out by a year either way, so my safe guesstimate is somewhere in the period 1985 – 88. (Which probably means my DFAT reference was not appropriate to the time — the departments of Foreign Affairs and Trade (or Overseas Trade) may have still been separate in those days).
Yes, if you sail out of Fremantle, looking for a good quiet spot to fish, the Straits of Hormuz, do seem a tad far away. And dropping your nets in the middle of one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world also seems a bit odd. But the “official story” in Perth was that the fishing was very good in the Persian Gulf, so boats from Fremantle were regularly making the trip.
I know what the guys ordering the missile launch thought was on the boat, but it is possible that the boat that was nuked, genuinely was on a fishing trip – genuine, or just cover for another boat doing something else.
The “something else” is the real story behind WA Inc. All that is probably worth a whole book on its own, but I am sitting on the story because I owe some of the guys involved (whom I knew in Perth) a favour. They were not Australians but were “working” in Perth.
It is another one of my long stories, but those Fremantle foreigners saved my and my daughter’s life years later (after our forced exile) — when the snipers decorated our kitchen with bullet holes, but deliberately missed us – two of their team went to prison because the guys had refused to shoot us – so the politicians who ordered the shooting, had them gaoled. Canberra threw out a diplomat who got wind of the story, and was thus in a position to blackmail certain people in Canberra.
The “Australian fishing fleet in the Persian Gulf because the fishing was good there” story was pretty much accepted in Perth – I never questioned it at the time – back then, I had no reason to — I had already been close to many of the “dots”, but, unless you have a reason to join the dots, it doesn’t happen.
We are starting to drift a bit “off topic” from mining in the Kimberley, but it is an indication of how things can be “arranged” or covered up in Perth.
[For another example of a story being down-played by the Perth media, the disappearance of Julie Cutler, in mid 1988, received remarkably scant coverage in the Perth press.]
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS……….hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Re,things being arranged and covered up in WA- the Walmadany/James Price Point lack of transparency and public accountability indicates
few things have changed.
Saint Geoffrey Cousins. He is the Australian you wish our politicians and leaders were. That which is largely extinct. A true Knight.THE Aussie. A Lighthorseman with a bank account:)
All dead now and Geoffrey roams the nation like Benjamin, the last tiger of his kind.
Not sure what it is with WA, I know the ground water can be no good for you and the living can be hard with climate and resources. I love nature and the deserts so I don’t find that offensive. Lots of fine people, like where the last true Australians went. A lot of hard cases and corruptions, much is too laid back while many live on bread lines.
Perth needs housing to grow. As the rest of Australia’s governing, the In crowd running the joint have left nowhere to grow and nothing in the bank by way of stability to idle over rough patches in. All for that pre planned boom by those upstairs and in the know. Lib , labour, same Joe, different hat. The people will once again pay for the collapse, the anger and domestic violence,the homelessness.
Money with no long term benefits is spent without question and anything goes as long as it has no long term benefit or stable footings.
Like globalisation, opportunism by conquering forces and the top stuffing itself with no accountability putting it’s stamp and claim on the globe. To leave in the night after raiding and the poo valve been left on.
It amazes me what the dumbest a… holes can pull over others and get away with. Dumbfounding.
WA is an interesting place, there’s a bit of it’s insides floating around now. More to come and nature has more to say.
It’s said Terra that your life happens while trying to make plans and live another.
Dear JIM, like TERRA AUSTRALIS, you have a way with words and painting pictures.
I think a number of our politicians could learn a lot from GEOFFREY COUSINS.
Clearly, one has to be prepared to hunt in packs these days, and be prepared to subjugate one’s conscience to political expediency.
Hi JIM,
Re what is different about WA:
The gap between rich and poor in Perth used to be the widest of all Australian cities (it might still be — I have been away from Perth for a while now, so I don’t know if things have shifted re the wealth and income disparity).
I found the best mental / psychological profile of perth was to think of the place as “DICKENS IN SPEEDOS”
By that I mean that despite the suntans and the beach, Perth is like a transplant of the values of Charles Dickens’ society – where the wealthy had no concern or interest in the state of the “lower classes”. It is hardly standard Australian thinking, but it explains a lot of the attitudes in Perth.
In that mental model of how society is meant to operate, people getting mugged on trains near Armadale or Cannington, simply doesn’t register as important.
And as for Aboriginal welfare, what happens at Mirrabooka (ie still in Perth, but well out of sight and mind), might as well be happening on another planet. While the Kimberleys – that may as well be the other side of the universe. All that matters from that part of the state is the profit – the wishes of the local indigenous count for about as much as Sid James and the Oozalum bird, symbol of fertility, in “Carry On Up The Jungle”.
[There is some darker stuff that is unique to Perth too (a long story, tied to attempts by some in the dominant clique, to fulfill ancient Greek prophecy) - and a "split loyalty" complex -- within Perth's wealthy (and its underworld), loyalty is often as much or more, to London, than to Australia. cf The last WA attempt to secede from Australia was as recent as the late 1970's].
Heard you on all that Terra, and witnessed it. It’s spot the Aussie over there too.You can pass ten people in a shopping centre before you find an Aussie. That doesn’t worry me at all.It’s great, but it is amazingly stark. And amazingly beautiful girls in WA. The class war is militant, the homeless everywhere and not the sort of place to be down on your luck. Some very hard and some very good people. If you haven’t been there for a while you’d be in for a shock. The monopolising is militant. Business’s savage. You put it very good.
Housing is causing no end of trouble and going to but upstairs loves it. It’s like Beazley comes home from across the big duck pond and empties his pockets out on the ground.
People need to organize or upstairs need to listen or made to. Many fine first people there, many not so and not all because of the cliche’d white caused broken family syndrome that the bad sing in defence. But that certainly did and does not help matters or should take away from the inborn past there of attitude that overbears first people and delights in painting the whole with the same brush. WA has heavy circumstance of climate, resource and distance to defend itself in those matters and to battle but the pressure from elitism and control of government does not help whatsoever.
Multiculturalism is changing that but WA is still a walk back in time and you can’t help feel that innocence will not keep you from the tower of London. I came across a bit of the old ways there with politics through the force but it does seem to be changing even if it needs a prod or too. Some things can only change from streets level. But no use if the culture still lives in the top up to Gina’s. There is a paranoia there that used to pervade and live in Brisbane in earlier decades. A fear that causes silence and oppression from big names and associations. The stories grow. The populace is still stuck in old stigma’s as many of Brisbane are and the heights love , manipulate and pocket the profits from the fear. I suspect many sandgropers age with regrets when there eyes open to that.
Policing’s money is on Dixie at the moment for the Cutler girl and it does fit. I was wondering of evidence, clothes etc and whether she went for a night swim with a toothy friend. But alone may be out of character. It’s a hard call, lots of hillbilly’s to pick from. I’m buying board shorts and flippers for xmas presents for Perth’s parliament this year.
I spoke to a WA detective some years ago that was over in Brisbane for a funeral. I used to work for his relatives when i was a youth that used to mind the brothels. He was adamant it was the public servant with the Cottesloe matter and needed not know anything else. Got him he reckoned. I gave him a name that has had the similar status , politics and long history and immunity you mentioned in your character that had moved to Perth from Brisbane. From missing women ,nightclub fires, clockwork orange characters and days. Mentioned it to Canberra too and have had the pleasure of that info being handed out on the street doing a job on me, not policing. I’m not amused and it’s caused me grief but that’s cool though, The streets know me. In the beginning of my harrassment my family got sick while helicopters and hawaiian shirts,sunglasses and tailings reigned, I found a new elbow with a hole drilled in it on the water meter connection. I laughed and took appropriate mode.
You have to be careful of what upstairs forces can manipulate and turn and try, matters into and to benefit and globally and things will only settle for the better with your Izraeli friend. The top end and ill amongst them are masters at profiting innocently and manufacturing bucks to stop in others hands. The top end greed costs the people here a lot of grief from their self indulgence and psychotics. Master opportunists, psychologists, disconnected, gutless, incompetant, bluffing in brilliance and criminality living amongst the good in heights as globally and all suffer.
I turned my back on rat race life many years ago after the death of my Father, forced to live in the bush in utmost torment and abuse as a youth. I found spirituality in nature from wanting to belong to something and stop ills in my country. Felt very small. I found it to be a very similar spirit I turned my back on ,what others worship as a money god and that some call the devil but so far, I find it one and the same and it exists over the globe and it finds me. No one and nothing is immune from it emphasizing a point or making turning points. I think it wants man to open eyes and meet halfway as it is everything, not one race, persuasion, country, book or nature or civilisation alone in standing. Many ill’s will still exist and happen, that is it and life but there seems to be a plan. The mechanics of many things are in play,we have no other choices in some matters, how they are handled and or accepted is the key. To take all and others into consideration in thought and decision is the key. Fates and destiny’s are real in the universe, balance is the key. From knowing it I have no fear of mine whatever the form. The fear is in not listening or taking the steps to live with it.
I have had a brief search into history to find if others have had experience and I find common leanings and words that lead to others having had encounters. I see signs in history that lead me to think that encounter has been great in some times and made big impression that others have tried to spread. They seem to lose grasp or sidetracked. Systems going bad. A learning process.
I found it in nature, it finds me through nature, i’m very comfortable with that. I’m not saying anymore.
The old stigma’s pass Terra,I learnt that in the seventies on the streets, I hope you relax. I see a familiarity in your penmanship.
Thanks JIM for the good wishes.
You covered a lot of topics – I will add a bit on the Julie Cutler disappearance, since it is probably a case people in the East are not familiar with:
She vanished around the winter solstice, 1988 – apparently into thin air. Unlike the coverage Jill Meagher’s disappearance received in the media, Julie Cutler barely got a mention in the WA press. And when that finally happened, it seemed to be included in the papers very grudgingly – a small paragraph here and there, a small byline, and all on about page umpteen of the paper, well away from the main news, or the sport – ie well away from where most people would be reading.
Her car was found days later, underwater, in the surf off Cottesloe Beach, below the stone breakwater (Groyne is the local term), at the souther end of the beach – the breakwater has a path on top of it — with rocks surrounding the path, about waist high on most people.
The car headlights were on – implying that the car was dumped overnight before it was found (otherwise the battery would have run out – ie if the car had been in the surf for days).
There were no tracks in the sand – indicating that the car came off the Groyne — but there wasn’t a scratch on the car, or on the rocks — which implies either a truck and a swing hoist and crane, or a barge (if so, why the lights, and why so close to the beach?).
Whichever way you analyse it, there had to be a well organised team involved in the disposal of the car – no “lone nut” could throw a car up and over the rocks from the path, and then hurl it a good twenty feet outwards to miss the rocks below. Another question is “How did whoever disposed of the car get access to the keys to remove the bollards preventing access to the paths — there can’t have been too big a list of people with keys eg council surf club, beach inspectors etc — the list is “finite” – finite enough that after 24 years, the WA Police would have had time to work through it).
Several people believe her disappearance is connected to the Claremont murders – where, according to the FBI analyst that was called in, the most likely scenario was a “grab team” abducting the girls – probably with a fake taxi – as happened when another girl caught a taxi in Claremont, but managed to kick her way out of the speeding cab as a guy who had been hiding behind her seat tried to overpower her. One of the SAS guys had an experience catching a cab from Claremont back to Campbell Barracks — it was only when he asked what the fare was, that he realised that there was no meter in the cab.
Whoever is orchestrating the murders, they are well organised, and have official backing — which police admitted freely (similar to the info you got). Police tipped off (early 90′s) parents in the Nedlands/Crawley area that there was a child abduction ring operating with government, courts and bureaucratic backing. Again, that group was well organised, with a rural property south of Perth where they were taking the children – to be hidden there until they were moved overseas.
All that might sound like just weird Perth corruption, but it starts to affect the rest of Australia when certain things can be organised, planned and “fixed” in Perth – the sort of things that happen well north of the Kimberleys – with a bit of a lean to the left, or as far away as the Persian Gulf, or in . . . . let’s call it VDL.
Dear JIM, are you referring to suspect Mark Dixie and is the Cutler you refer to, Julie Cutler ?
I did not know about the circumstances of the car and your line into the extent of the paedophile matter is disturbing and more than highly possible. I know and remember Brisbane’s streets in old decades but the crims were also the cops so not much didn’t go on or not get caught out of the circle. A big nervous system.
I would say on the matter of the car, that I am a very capable driver. Learnt on dirt and mountain roads and at extreme high speeds and grassy 45 degree mountains. Brisbane’s finest made a sport trying to catch me and never could even in their new v8 sent out from the city to do the job. I’ve spent half a life outback cross country in Queensland and opal and channel country and rocky mountain ranges and playing on the mountains on the Great Divide. When I went to Perth I ran into 20 year old’s climbing rocks and near vertical slopes in old Quarries and what they did with every day ease had me panicked following them. It is a favourite and one of the only really popular recreations available and a loved art in WA towns. The skill was also very high in Tasmania and New Zealand a couple of decades ago. Amazing. I used to always get asked to park absent mates cars in ridiculous, headscratching positions for a laugh at gatherings and I found I have many betters. That is pointing to a local or a very lucky dive over the rocks which I doubt and at risk of being spotted.
I caught a cab home from Perth to the Northside and had a Sihk ? driver, Indian and hairdo. I was tending a loud alcoholic friend full of party. The driver asked if we wanted to watch porn. I said no thanks but it came on anyway on a dashboard tv. The taxi had been in a bad accident and was badly out of alignment and ducking and darting in and out of corners with dangerous suspension. He was speeding, living on luck not skill. It took undoing my seatbelt and manoeuvring to punch him to get him to slow down. I don’t know what the porn was all about. He had a meter.
Prior to Cottesloe horrors there had been quite a few incidents of
taxi abductions and with another guy appearing from behind the back seat. I read a book on the matter. WA was hillbilly central in older decades with plenty of remnants still to surface. As you would know it has been a very hard place. The overlooking of the taxi incidents is disturbing in the matter of the girls. You’d like to think that the matter was looked into. If Dixie had anything to do with it he would probably have had no trouble finding a friend in WA or already had one which could explain the driving skills. A walk in the park for near any WA bush local.
It is amazing how incompetance can reign and look like other.In Brisbane in other days, all and police were too scared to move on many matters. Real and paranoid. Like I’ve said, I’ve wondered if anything is in the water over there:)
Bit off topic here for Tess I Think.
A few boats of all persuasions had trouble in the Gulf. One I remember was a missile passing between two guys sorting catch and going through the back windows and out the front of the windscreen. Like roo shooters will shoot out headlights of others on their turf. I’m very wary of conspiracy theories.
Yes Tess. I don’t know enough to comment too much, only what I read and know of life on the streets.
Hi Jim,
As far as I know, the child abduction ring with the half-way house south of Perth, was not a paedophile operation. The woman who came to police attention “grooming” kids was part of a well known world-wide wealthy outfit that has gotten plenty of negative publicity over many decades.
They were trying to abduct talented kids – which was why they were “hunting” close to the university campus, and near the music department – they were looking for kids with special talent and/or bright parents.
The police warnings to local residents and parents were very much “off the record” — ie the police went door-knocking up and down the streets, but never put anything on paper or in the media.
There are positives to Perth too – a lot of talent and innovation, which mat have been why the group was seeking Perth kids.
That one’s news to me about the group.
There is a lot of boredom in Perth for talent to have time and has produced well. But that has passed with Perth’s new found wealth and screws on the lower. Shameful and badly out of touch. More in line with elsewhere with the need. Cashing in on it under excuse.
There is also in WA a very old world culture of status like the 19th century. Isolated but quaint, a little bit house on the prairie stuff. Forthright, toffy, class. Dangerous in some.Some have it, some fake it.
It’s hard to picture the group surviving with the manhood and feral manhood WA could call up to deal to the matter. Have you any net references for info without going out of your way?
. See,Brisbane street kid. Dead soldiers son.
Matters like that cripple crime and corruption fighting and happy life. Elements of the top and criminal love that air of fear. Makes me laugh.
I know too when authority goes door knocking like that unofficially, that the way is paved for any thing can happen and it wasn’t us. When they are up to no good and try and do that to you, you do it back
If it’s no problem to you I would be interested in browsing the matter, if not no worries. There was some Melbourne figures in Perth too. Timelines may be interesting and with other matter. People are emboldened by big name association. Think they can do and get away with anything. A recurring theme in the courts. I do know the thing about sleeping dogs exists too, very well.
Anyhow, here’s to Geoffrey Cousins. I will have my 3 monthly sip of alcohol tonight and toast him. And keep my rum fingers off the keyboard.
I was looking at an old page of the Mark Dixie matter. I found mention of a satanic cult in WA and supposedly with a Premiers indulgence.
The child abduction ring never made it to the media or to the internet. The group (er cult) is very high profile, very wealthy and have had (in the past) links to US intelligence, and to at least one well known Research Institute/university in the USA.
The WA police arrested (in Nedlands) the woman who was one of the big whigs in the Perth branch of the cult – she was the spotter/groomer for the kids chosen for abduction.
She used to try and ingratiate herself with the mothers of the kids she had selected – and in doing so, used to boast about people she knew, and how well connected she was. If she was just rattling off well known names, you could assume that she was just making it all up.
I have a degree in physics (from an Australian university), spent several years both teaching (6 years) and doing research (another 6 years) at universities in Australia, spent time at a uni in Silicon Valley, have friends in the US space program, and have both friends and family members who have been part of teams that won Nobel prizes in scientific fields – physics and biology. So, (the point of all that), the university and research scene both in Australia and the USA is something I am familiar with.
This woman, seemingly untouchable by the WA courts, was boasting of, and claiming to know top scientists whose name would be unrecognised by most of the general public. And she was identifying them by their first names. She was cunning and evil, but she had never been to a university. There was no way, in the normal course of events, that she would have known those names.
All VERY STRANGE!
Both the media and the police have publicly pushed the notion that the Perth murders were the work of one, or one with an accomplice, killer. The signs (the fake taxis, the court protection of the self described “violent sexual predator”, the harassment of anyone who got a hint of something deeper cf the last 7 or 8 comments in http://www.independentaustralia.net/2012/business/media-2/jill-meagher-and-alan-jones/, the lifting of Julie Cutler’s car up and over the rocks at Cottesloe — all of those things are signs of a well organised, and well protected group involved in the murders – ie WAY more than just the violent and/or nutty rapists and “grab team” operating on the streets of Claremont, or in the fake taxi.
The careful positioning of bodies in a pattern across Perth also points to some sort of cult or ritual being involved. The arrest of the suspect (read “patsy”) for the current Rayney murder trial in Perth. has all the signs of a ritual — the arrest was staged to fit into a pattern, involving where the victim (the wife)’s body was found, where her car was dumped, and certain other special locations in Perth, including a military barracks.
The victim was a government lawyer. The “patsy” is a Perth QC – her husband. It sounds like the marriage wasn’t great, which is the line the prosecution pushed as the patsy’s motive for the murder. But doubting cynics might see a connection between the wife’s involvement in a probe into police failings re the Claremont killings, and her sudden murder. Cynics might also wonder why a Perth QC, who took his daughters to school every morning, and then went to his office, and/or on to court everyday – in a pattern that hadn’t changed in years – had to be arrested “in transit” to fit a pattern on the Perth map.
It would seem more practical to arrest a guy at home, or at his office than to try and nab him in transit down by the Bell Tower.
The “satanic cult” side of it would be tough to prove without film or photos from a ritual. Satanic or otherwise, the cult/group seems to have been running for longer than the term of just one state premier. And going by the grid and arrest pattern in the Corryn Rayney murder, the WA police are either in on it, or taking orders from people in the group.
In that sort of genuinely evil “climate”, it wasn’t that hard to get people to turn a blind eye to planned treason and mass murder – a story which the Australian public could not handle (for now).
I viewed a couple of stills of the Cutler girl at the taxi rank. Comments to the film of it say it is obvious that she got into the taxi with her friends and quote the times of the frames and her movements into a car.
The guy in question in the film, all I can say is that any where up to two dozen or more people will know who that is.
I checked photo’s of the groin and anyone with bush skills could drive a car down those rocks. That minor skill needed is common to Perth people.The rocks are damn near a ramp in many places.
If the car was driven into the surf with the air bubbles under the bonnet and roof and with a wave motion, the car will move from where driven into. The lights were on because it was done in a hurry and the person getting out of the water.
I don’t know about the fencing and locks. Locals who fish would know the status of those locks and how to get around them. Surf action could easily pull the car down or out further along the groyne if it was driven in beside the Groyne.
It looks to have been driven in not dumped going by the lights left on. I would say he knows the Groyne.
I found info to a few sect risings in Perth.
The criminality in Perth and in the police force and general thuggery in the community is what has stopped these matters being solved. People shut up and to this day the people of that era will still be living in it in attitude.
They need to address crowds at the beginning of concerts over there on these matters so people are wary going home and to ignite someone to talk.
On James Price Point. The government is over reaching on this matter I believe. The matters rising has come at a time of un natural oppression on the lower. Strongly evidenced by desperation, housing and pensioning and rental monopoly. And other matters of top end over bearance and indulgence on the foundations and in the corporate liberal section. It’s just a pig grab.
Any profiting will be spent sustaining the founding and distance and corporate adventures and corporate control of government and will be a huge poo fight subject for decades. Benefits to locals. bullstuff. Utter corporate crap. Only thing to come will be more strongarm and public handouts to private maintaining the indulgence and as Sir Geoffrey has said , a mad rush on the area.
Thanks JIM,
The captions on the still frames from the taxi rank probably mixed up the girls’ names (there were several who vanished, so the mistake is understandable] — Julie Cutler vanished after leaving work in the city/CBD – while the others vanished after leaving Claremont – am guessing that it was one of them getting into the taxi.
I will have to “turn off the tap” on the info — I have let out quite a bit in the posts over recent weeks – and suddenly I seem to be back on the “active list” — nine separate incidents in an 18 hour period , overnight and yesterday (6 computer ones, one vehicle sabotage incident , and two booby traps – which could have been fatal).
The first couple I could write off as co-incidence, but they kept coming. after several years semi on the run and ducking bullets – after we were kicked out of Australia, I don’t want to go back to the hassle of living like that again — my teaching and research works much better with a permanent roof over my head — as I have had for the last 3 years or so.
I think Perth will come good — most of the corruption is at the top, ie the majority of people are good. Ditto for the WA Police — overall (ie the majority of WA police officers) I thought it was a decent police force as indicated by the guys tipping us off that a bent judge was dunning for us.
I used to do a bit of charity work in the 80′s, and met a drug dealer from Kings Cross who had just gotten out of a WA prison. She was mouthing off about what a crummy police force WA had — that wouldn’t let her buy her way out of her arrest and drug charges (like she always did back in Sydney).
Things have slipped a bit since then, but there were still enough decent guys in the WA police force to get us (my daughter was 6 years old back then) out of WA alive. (The govt still stole our home after we left, but we are still alive, and my daughter is now grown up, is married and has a baby.
We still miss our WA lifestyle, but life here (snow, mountains, stunning scenery and a new family) have their (big) pluses too.
WA mining is now such a huge slice of the Australian economy, that if short term blindness and stupidity does mess it up, the whole country will suffer in the crash/fallout.
Hi Terra, I hear you on the picture mix up. I dived in last night for a browse of the matters. There’s many.
Glad things have been better for you. You shouldn’t think too well of the help you received from the force, it was staged. What happened was supposed to. No one saved you from the Judge except perhaps the judiciary or politics that arranged to frighten you out. I know of the same tactics being applied here in a couple of underhanded political matters saving face for the corrupt. Run of the mill.
I know the streets. The police bumped off their brothel and pot competition here for years one way or another. Raids, bashings, busts, you name it. The heights had an array of tentacles into the thug world to use against political and criminal competition. Always a flow of harmless users or petty sellers going through the courts like the woman you mentioned. The brothel and pot business in Perth has been a mainstay for above and around since the gold rush days. It was thriving when those girls disappeared. I recently had encounters with the matter in Perth. Thousands being brought in to this country and good women being recruited with thuggery and fear and blackmail of illegal status.
Lots of good people in the force I know, and back then in Perth too. But often gutless, scared and hands tied or just dumb bludger. Many in no position to help.
I cop the pc interference often. And on the mobile. Army signals directorate. I’ve had the CIA insignia flashed up on a blue page a couple of times. I really cop it on any of the US/OZ media channels,Facebook, Youtube, Murdoch’s. The psyche the sheep channels. House and phone bugged, they ghost and try and break you down so you end up on pills with the medical industries boys labelling you as paranoid. Run of the mill Terra. Every thing you type can turn up on a screen to be read, intercepted or through your provider .
I released info of my Father and families info for help through Veterans Affairs to Canberra and then the media, all the big names. And info on other matters to Howard. The matter given to Howard was more than enough to bribe the Labour party executive with. I did it for justice for murdered girls. It feels like the ‘Right ” have had a party with it going by social justice and movements. What do you do, the man’s the Prime Minister that is all citizens have to turn to. No help. Federal tails with the corny hawaiian shirts and sunglasses. Helicopters, SAS gunships hovering my back yard. I approached Wayne Goss too originally. No help and info there went right to his corrupt staff. Aus wide drug network including police and federal, associations to murder, real estate corruption’s. Police harrasment which so far seems to have finished for the moment. Utter hell since 1990 with no one to turn to. I can’t even say what’s been going on to defend myself.
I’m not long back from Perth, your honest police are still playing with insurance and panelbeaters and tow truck drivers. It ran into armed hold ups in Brisbane and Brisbane’s underground. Perhaps taxi repairs in Perth?
My daughter has a child to the paedophile who molested her from 12 yrs old at her bus stop, police wouldn’t do anything. “Too close to the age they can’t interfere with” Word for word. She ended up having a secret relationship with him after two years of hell and baseball bats and ran away from home prior to my family breaking up from stress and interference and her near very successful suicide attempt. And wondering if their grandfathers brothers are going to turn up in a helicopter in the middle of the night and deal to us. Didn’t see for 8 yrs. Just made contact again in a hell of a situation.
The main driver, the US health , pharma and legal and insurance system, the golden goose and enslaver of nations to the right and lazy and vicious and superior and that means hell for the people as society and life is structured as a garden for the top to feed off in perpetual motion. It’s appearing here and it’s roots and foundation. It’s the evil behind many movements non stop even before 75. It’s enough to say that it is behind all movements. Look at Johnson and Johnson here presently. Over 10,000 people died of a bleeding stomach in the states before viox? received attention. Collateral damage till you can look at 10,000 people on a football oval at the one time dying slowly in the worst pain that exists. Hydrochloric acid.
The root of all evil. Politics is a game to the giants and they’ve turned our representation into swill. All tied in to Presidents and globalisation.
You seem as high as a kite on your situation Terra. I have to nut through happenings to fathom what is going on, Some are hard to discern one way or another till you get a grasp.
If you are worried or want your future back and or peace of mind to live, try and contact me through Tess and I will look at your matter to see what is going on and confront and finish it no comeback on you. I’m not worried about booby traps. I’m a walking booby trap , I’ve got boobs hanging off me.
Yes JIM,
You are right about the “help” we received being planned to get us away from WA — I (with a couple of business partners from Perth) was eventually offered huge software contracts IF I would take the software to the USA and Europe on behalf of the Aust federal govt, and a consortium of Aust banks and a state govt. It was all just a ruse to get me right out of the country – ie they never intended tp pay us, no matter how successful we were — the software is now in use in most computers world wide – it has been a huge part of the world software market for about 13 years now.
Thanks for the offer, but the Aust end of our exile and harassment was only part of the problem – by the time we had finished with the software sales, and had in the middle of that uncovered treason in several countries I was sitting on multiple countries’ intell agencies’ “unpopular list”.
We found ourselves living out in the open / on the street, in a foreign country, where we knew no-one – money stolen, bank accounts cleaned out, not allowed to work, and with the Australian govt refusing to let us back into our own country.
We ended up living out in the open on Maori land, protected by our Maori hosts – who were wild and dangerous enough to scare off the govt thugs sent after us. Everything was different from what we knew — even the plants – at first we got cuts all over our legs and hands because we did not know that some of the leaves were as sharp as razors.
Almost as soon as we got onto Maori land I started dreaming in languages I did not know beforehand – ancient languages. My unusual education out there was so good, that nearly three years later when I first got my hands on a book written in one of those languages, I could read it (it was a different script and alphabet from what we use for English.
That education has never really stopped. About another three years later, I got my hands on some ancient papers from thousands of years ago that had been hidden away in NZ – something Tess and I swapped a bit of info on in some earlier posts. There was something a tad supernatural about the way I had been prepared to be able read that material.
There was some great stuff in there – history, science, and spiritual stuff. It has become a huge part of my life since then, so much so, that if I won lotto tomorrow, I would devote most of my life to teaching and researching what I learned – it is genuinely good, and brilliant stuff. I would be very bummed out if some politician or bureaucrat stopped me teaching it by putting me in a coffin (a few of them did try between 2001 and 2009, but, obviously, I am still here).
It might seem a funny thing to say for someone who was kicked out of his own country, had his home stolen, got shot at etc, but between what I learned in those ancient documents and from my dream-by-night education, plus a new generation and a new family, i have a good life now. I deal with the financial robbery and loss, by thinking of myself as just being 16 again, ie getting a second chance to start over.
Part of the reason we survived was the people who were kind and good to us – and it was often the people who were on the wrong side of the system and the courts, and who had had problems and suffering imposed on us, who were the kindest. One of the guys who probably saved our lives (he had a government contract on our lives called off) was the son of one of the leaders of the Mr Asia drug syndicate from back in the 70′s. He had been in and out of prison, and was high up on the police most wanted list – as far as I know, the Almighty, or karma, has looked after him very well since then – enough to make me think that this time around, kindness got rewarded.
The kindness we received, often from people whose background was not too respectable”, gave me a lot of enhanced faith in humanity — despite the corruption and political witchcraft we saw up (too) “close and personal”.
You seem a respectable person Terra. You background and education may have left you unprepared for the terrorism and bluff amongst it. A lot of the old names from trouble pre Fitzgerald were ok too. Many not so and causing grief though, to society, and others would use their name, association and standing to prosper and bully and a tribe and network of trouble would flourish and in many cases unbeknown to the individual what people rubbing shoulders with them were getting away with in their name and emboldened by it. An example is the WA police commissioner who’s son got caught with a drug lab mixing bulk drugs for the bikers. Lots of fine bikers too.
You have the complication of international politics in your situation. Or for some to play on. A hard and hurtful lesson finding out what your country is.
My father was colorblind with race, loved the Maori’s in the Kiwi battalions.Artillery. Spent days with them and partying. He spent a lot of time with the first people up north growing up. But he was the full blown OZ /US flag waving idiot. Wouldn’t give an inch on the battlefield for all the saints and angels and fellow Australian’s he was protecting back home and with all the promises of Government to fall back on. A man of the pen and suits, never stopping trying to spread civility to his last breath. That’s why my blood is up. Living through and witnessing what they did to the OZ dream sucker citizen and 50 years of hell here myself amongst fellow Australian’s.
You get any more trouble, start spitting out names on here and let the people and streets do some attending.
I’ve got some unfinished business on matters and in Perth. You seem content to hang onto all the juicy stuff. I know that feeling.
I don’t get much sleep these days and I did pass on the alcohol last night.becoming a fine habit. The word is “Liberal right to blackmail the Labour executive”, not bribe.
Yes, I was completely unprepared for the world I found myself in – the Australia I knew and grew up in, was, or seemed, quite different from the new environment I was suddenly transplanted into.
The Police Commissioner’s son and the drug lab explosion is something I wonder about – because his slide into drug use began when time the police were part of running my 6 year old daughter (and me), out of her home and country. The daughter of the head of police intelligence (from the same period) was in the adjoining flat when the building exploded – and like the Commissioner’s son, could have been killed in the explosion. The head of the Perth CIB when we were exiled, was killed in a car bombing a couple of years after we were thrown out. It would be hard to prove a link, but sometimes I do wonder about those “co-incidences” (there have been several others).
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, are you referring to COMMISSIONER KARL O’CALLAGHAN and his son RUSSELL O’CALLAGHAN and are you referring to
former police SUPERINTENDENT DAVE PARKINSON and his daughter STACEE PARKINSON ?
Hi TESS,
You have the right names for the Police Commissioner and his son — his son ended up serving time in prison after the explosion, and sounded like he was trying to sort out his life — with the support of his dad.
From memory, his father only became Commissioner after we were forced out of Australia. (So), I don’t know if he had any connection to the stuff that I blew the whistle about, or our forced exile.
I was never told the name of the girl who was on the other side of the wall (ie in the adjoining flat) when the explosion went off, nor the name of her dad — I was only told what his role was around the time of the serial murders (which, may be still happening all these years later), and our “departure”. (ie that he was the guy in charge of what the police described as their intelligence arm or section – up until then, I did not even know that Australian police forces had “intelligence” departments).
I was told there were kids either in the flat or close by, as the explosion took place – but thankfully, no fatalities.
I heard that a couple of the guys making the drugs, including the Commissioner’s son, were injured in the blast.- with the injuries to one of them being serious.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-09-02/police-commissioner-son-to-serve-time/2868656
All my worries totally dissappeared with this unstaged photo captured by a concealed camera.
There is a grey area of policing and politics that does get exploited for good and bad, bad, bad.bad. did i say bad? That is the managing of the prostitution industry and just how to manage it. In Queensland it turned into Soddam proportions like all other places has, The Cross, Melbourne etc, etc. etc. Rotten with corruption and drugs and stand over schemes and neutralised representation for the people by holders of dirty hands through the public service. Lots grow from it, established drug industries and networks full of high flyers, issues that can’t and won’t be addressed because of international standings and political face saving. Like the rest of the good world gets caught with too.
Hi Jim,
Thanks for the link and the photo.
I knew Ray Whitrod when he was at ANU – after Joh booted him out. I think he was lecturing in criminology or doing a doctorate in it – I have forgotten the details. He had wanted to clean up the Qld police, and got kicked out of his job as commissioner. Anyway, I learnt a bit about the prostitution / corruption going on in Qld from him.
Ray had posted Terry Lewis to Mt Isa to get rid of him – and had demoted him too (I think). Joh fired Ray, brought Terry Lewis back to Brisbane, made him the new Commissioner, and got him a knighthood – which I think he lost soon after, or around the time when he was sent to prison. Ray was, remarkably, pretty restrained in what he used to say about Joh – ie Ray still gave Joh credit for the good stuff he did for Qld, and I never heard him say that Joh was corrupt – he used to jokingly write it off as Joh’s Lutheran blinkers making him see the world with a certain slant.
I “encountered” (and how!) a prominent madam after we were kicked out of Australia. She was/is an absolute shocker — the country’s senior witch, a big wheel in the entertainment industry, who had probably done more to bribe and corrupt the police force than any other single individual. She used to arrange contract killings on behalf of bent politicians, was importing and selling drugs, used a bikie gang as her hired heavies, burned down several buildings and had other people framed for the arson etc etc. Intell guys from two different countries told me she was involved in sacrificing children as part of her witchcraft. The stuff they told me sounded like something out of a horror film, most of which I had no way of corroborating — but the names of politicians who were in her coven, and selling drugs, all checked out. Like you say, it is a BAD industry.
Thanks for all the interest and support — fingers crossed that TESS and IA can put together some info on your father’s case — it sounds like there is or has been, an on-going attitude of seeing ex-servicemen as expendable or disposable after they have finished their service. The sooner that changes, once and for all, the better.
Roo shooter and opal mining aquaintances showed me photo’s of themselves at 15 and 16 after bashings when Lewis was at Charleville. Lucky to be alive over misdemeanour cheek. Looked like snaps from middle East torturing’s or South Africa covering the whole body. They were white.You can picture what the first people copped with no recourse. Charleville was a training ground. That’s what Joh liked of Lewis and his business and political etiquette. Attack dog. No Joh, Queensland would have been a better place. The right rose. Everything did in extremes from fear and indulgence. I know a lot of Lewis. Sleeping dogs.
The brother’s I mentioned use to have a car cleaning business. I was a detailer. Was wanted all over Brisbane for my abilities. Delivering mustangs and GtHo’s, Europe’s best and Stingrays around the place for dealers, 16 and no licence.454′s , four barrels and petrol 2 dollars a jerry can,yah Baby!
I was took of the streets for a while and fed after Dad died by a D’s family who worked with Lewis. Hearts of gold but nightmare dysfunctional as I learnt the hard way.
Lot of people say old Abe Saffron was ok. Good people told me that. Well i’m a good person and he was wanting me to go collecting the gambling money in the middle of the Fitzgerald inquiry. -Well that’s the name others who were thick with Lewis’s mob were hiding behind anyway:) By that age I started to figure my Father’s matter was probably doing the rounds and too many coincidences and I knew from where life took me where a lot of goings on and persons met and crossed tracks and whether they knew it or not so I wasn’t getting dirty hands. I knew the criminal in Brisbane was also the intelligence trail. I used to fear for my life when I was a Youth. Too many coincidences and figures and invitations coming into my life for my liking.I just wanted a good job, be with good people and pursue my hobby business ventures,try and get a house for my younger siblings, we were in a bad way and stressed to death, and try to get over everything. I knew Brisbane from the gutters to the pearls. The Joke got too big to support them all and spread like a disease.
I’m having a rest from this.Does me no good.Been a long twenty years since I applied to everyone for help.
Years ago (back when I was in Perth), I saw a guy’s leg (je had one leg about 3 – 4 inches shorter than the other), grow instantly – so that both legs were the same length. I have seen more than my fair share of religious con-men, faith-healers and phonies, but this was real – it happened , literally, inches away from me. So I know, miracles can and do happen.
Wishing you some genuine miracles for health, family, a good future, and a successful resolution of the way your dad was so badly treated.
It doesn’t look like that’s going to happen. Will make my own justice if it comes to that. They’re doing a job on us, I’ll do one back. Which is what they have been provoking for. I’m on my own, always have been. Here in America.
I think your pulling my leg.
The “instantaneous leg growing” story had a couple of funny (humorous) twists to it, reaching as far away as Sydney (Bondi Beach and the Mater Hospital) and Queensland — tales that are too long for here.
And then, years later, another (far from humorous) twist emerged – a link to the media and govt cover-up of the worst act of treason in Australia’s history.
STEPHEN MAYNE’S CARBONATED COMMENTS IN CRIKEY ABOUT WOODSIDE: -
April 21, 2011
‘While Andrew Bolt and Terry McCrann keep howling at the moon with their hysterical climate-change denialism, it is amusing that another arm of the Murdoch family helped fund yesterday’s carbon-related shareholder resolution at the Woodside Petroleum AGM in Perth.
Woodside initially rejected a standard shareholder resolution calling for greater disclosure of carbon costs, so the Climate Institute, which was established in 2005 with a $10 million donation from Rupert Murdoch’s niece Eve Kantor, pursued the irresistible path of proposing the following new rule in the Woodside constitution.’
Read more: –
http://www.crikey.com.au/2011/04/21/woodside-resists-perfectly-reasonable-shareholder-resolution-on-carbon/
An ARROGANT SIDE to WOODSIDE?!!
Surely not! Not in our upright and upstanding WA power and boardroom culture!!
Dear TERRA AUSTRALIS, I posted STEPHEN MAYNE’s article because this entire aspect seems to have been overlooked by MSM, for some strange reason. I actually found it on Stephen’s own website.
WOODSIDE, like so many other multinationals and major corporations, are unused to being challenged or even being questioned by their own shareholders, let alone an inquisator like GEOFFREY COUSINS.
You can see how MICHAEL CHANEY squirms under questioning by Cousins.
He can’t stomach the peer to peer interview.
One of the guys I went to school with became a high profile and very successful fund and investment manager in the US. He used to say that the attitude of Australian companies to their own shareholders did not sit well in the USA.
The US tradition was that fleecing the public was a good way to become a respected pillar of society, but fleecing the investors and shareholders, would have you held in disrepute even 3 or 4 generations later.
The Americans thought that the subtleties of that strategy hadn’t quite filtered through to our Aust executives.
I suspect that Perth based companies operate in an atmosphere of less regulation and less scrutiny than those in the east.
The boom and bust economy cycle, where the next boom always seems to overcome the sins and errors of the previous crash is part of the problem – you can get away with a lot of past sins, if you can now point to rising profits and share dividends.
The isolation is a factor too – with effectively one road, one rail line, and one airport, in and out of WA, it has been easy for a small group to maintain control, & become comfortable running things as they please.
Local legend used to have it that UWA (MICHAEL CHANEY’s alma mater) was the wealthiest university in the country – with more in assets, cash reserves, and investment funds than any other tertiary institution in Australia. Yet it was reputed to be the beneficiary of the greatest largess from Canberra. I never checked the figures to see if it was true, but the local attitude was that that is how it should be, and nobody should dare put the funding under any scrutiny — unless, of course, they were lobbying for Canberra to increase the grants to UWA.
Future mining execs can graduate from UWA absorbing the attitudes of the place — that the “little people” are just there as pawns and props, to be used and taken advantage of. (cf the posts I did on one of your other articles re the UWA admin and security deliberately encouraging and protecting a rape and murder suspect on campus. So far, they have escaped any scrutiny for intentionally endangering their own students. SQUIRMING under pressure would be a novel experience for them — as it must have been when GEOFFREY COUSINS put the heat on WOODSIDE.