debate – Michmutters
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Entertainment

PLATELL’S PEOPLE: Jerry Hall should never have taken a penny of Rupert Murdoch’s £15 billion

Back in June, on learning Jerry Hall’s magical marriage to Rupert Murdoch was ending after just six years, I wrote that the last thing we fans wanted to learn of our golden girl was that, in the end, she took the money.

I dared to hope that this fiercely independent, talented woman would set a standard. Wealthy already, she would not take a penny of Rupert’s £15 billion fortune.

How wrong I was. As details gradually emerge of the couple’s oh-so-speedy divorce settlement, it appears Jerry will instead enjoy a payday of somewhere between £50 million and £250 million, depending on who you believe, from her nonagenarian ex, including their £11 million Henley mansion and a St Tropez pad.

Not bad for six years of marriage! Yet that huge settlement stands as an insult to any woman Jerry’s age — at 66, she’s two years older than me — who ella dearly hopes to marry again.

The figures in her case may be eye-watering, but the principles are the same. Middle-aged men and women even of modest means think long and hard about marrying. If it fails, they fear they’ll get fleeced.

Back in June, on learning Jerry Hall’s magical marriage to Rupert Murdoch was ending after just six years, I wrote that the last thing we fans wanted to learn of our golden girl was that, in the end, she took the money

I speak from experience. During my last — sadly failed — engagement, I made it clear to my fiancé from him I’d never seek a penny of his money from him.

I wanted a ‘pre-nup’ establishing that if we split, I would get nothing: just keep the happy memories. His children from him would receive their full entitlement: his pension, his home and whatever savings were left after the taxman had taken his greedy share from him.

In turn, of course, he’d have no claim on my finances: I’ve worked hard all my life and it’s up to me what I do with my modest wealth.

When Jerry split with Mick Jagger in 1999, she received around £30 million, including a vast family home. Her children of her are grown-up: she has enough money to last several lifetimes.

Yet it seems she even wanted to be given Rupert’s £164 million Montana ranch and has now been ‘displaced’ from his vineyard in California. How many houses does a girl need?

Inevitably, Jerry has suggested it’s all the stepchildren’s fault. It is claimed they never trusted her, suspecting she was her after their dad’s money. Maybe they were right.

Yes, Rupert has kept most of his billions, but surely she is letting down lovelorn women everywhere.

Call me old-fashioned, but marriage should be about love, not money.

Latest on the wokies’ list of banned books is Anna Sewell’s beloved Black Beauty — for its ‘racist’ title and its scenes of animal cruelty. Crikey, let’s hope they never find out about The Very Hungry Caterpillar, which callously fat-shames larvae.

Olivia got it so right

In her autobiography Don’t Stop Believin’, Olivia Newton-John revealed the skintight black trousers she wore in Grease were not really leather, but a pair of 1950s sharkskin pants.

And when accused of sending a terrible message to girls that you had to be sexy to get your man, she calmly replied: ‘It was about choice. Empowerment comes from calling your own shots and being who you want to be.’

Amen to that, and farewell to the divine Olivia.

Increasingly apoplectic ‘money-saving expert’ Martin Lewis screeches on the BBC about the ‘cataclysm’ of rising energy prices.

Given that Martin sold his website to MoneySuper-Market for £87 million back in 2012, the only ‘inflation’ he has to worry about is his ego ballooning to ever more massive proportions.

Cruise a callous boy, Lewis?

Aging boy-racer Lewis Hamilton says the hardest conversation he’s ever had was turning down Tom Cruise’s offer of a role in his Top Gun: Maverick blockbuster. How revealing of this self-obsessed petrolhead: most of us would find it more awkward to sack our own dad as manager after he’d worked four jobs to support our dreams of becoming a Formula 1 star.

Netting Serena Williams for the cover of Vogue, the magazine’s frosty editor Anna Wintour declares the tennis star is ‘a figure so much larger than the game’. Well said, Anna! So why did our hefty heroine Serena, draped in billowing Balenciaga, appear so Photoshopped to slimness she was almost unrecognizable?

Pouring my favorite tipple, vodka, I noticed the bottle had a rainbow glow. No, I hadn’t had too many: it turns out that Absolute ‘proudly supported the LBGTQ+ community’. Strewth, I wanted a drink not a diversity lecture. Time to switch to gin — but should I call it Mumbai Sapphire?

Brave Anneka Rice confesses that when her Alzheimer’s-stricken father was admitted to hospital with a broken hip, she was tempted to end his life out of ‘deep love’ — after he’d told her not to let him ‘linger in pain’. Weeks before my own dad died, he became bedridden when he fell and broke his hip. I’m just glad all he asked me to do was to cut and file his fingernails from him, the saddest yet most tender thing I ever did for him.

Sean Bean is in hot water for saying intimacy coordinators — on film sets thanks to #MeToo — take the spontaneity out of sex scenes: ‘The natural way lovers behave would be ruined by someone bringing it down to a technical exercise.’ I agree, sex in movies now is just so sexless.

Having met Mr Bean several times in our local pub, I can tell you that no red-blooded woman would ever need help in getting intimate with him.

westminster wars

Cabinet members say Boris-backstabber Rishi Sunak ‘dug his heels in’ resisting attempts to cut Brexit red tape. So that explains why he had holes in his shoes this week.

Keir Starmer has been on holiday for two weeks — but insists he’s still working. It gives a new meaning to ‘WFH’: Working From Holiday.

Hurrah for Attorney General Suella Braverman ruling it will be illegal for schools to have only unisex loos. Sure, genuinely trans kids deserve their own space, but a girl’s right to privacy should always trump the wishes of any boy who fancies wearing a frock.

Cabinet members say Boris-backstabber Rishi Sunak 'dug his heels in' resisting attempts to cut Brexit red tape.  So that explains why he had holes in his shoes this week

Cabinet members say Boris-backstabber Rishi Sunak ‘dug his heels in’ resisting attempts to cut Brexit red tape. So that explains why he had holes in his shoes this week

We know the boy meant well with his documentary about homophobia in the Commonwealth, which he inevitably blamed on the Empire. But Tom Daley went too far when he said: ‘It honestly makes me feel sick to be British.’

Yes, the Empire made mistakes, but it brought democracy and stability to millions. Sorry Tom, but your film ended up a belly flop.

Tom Daley went too far when he said: 'It honestly makes me feel sick to be British.'  Yes, the Empire made mistakes, but it brought democracy and stability to millions.  Sorry Tom, but your film ended up a belly flop

Tom Daley went too far when he said: ‘It honestly makes me feel sick to be British.’ Yes, the Empire made mistakes, but it brought democracy and stability to millions. Sorry Tom, but your film ended up a belly flop

Charlie Josephine, responsible for the Globe Theatre’s new production about Joan of Arc, says: ‘I’m properly passionate about making art that’s honest, particularly stories that center on queer people.’

Hence this Maid of Orleans is ‘non-binary’, with ‘they/them pronouns’. Are pronouns your top concern when the ‘proper passionate’ English are burning you at the stake?

Trans man Kyle Andrew, 26, dodges jail despite admitting burglary and stealing thousands of pounds to pay for his cannabis and crack-cocaine habit.

As this felon had been ‘transitioning’ since the age of 16 — and is all set to freeze his eggs — some woke judge now decrees that putting him in a women’s prison might damage his ‘mental health’. How about the mental health of his victims?

Keep dancing, Helen

Less than six months after her husband of eight years Richie Myler ‘left the family home’ for another woman shortly after she had delivered their baby, Countryfile presenter Helen Skelton signs up for Strictly to find happiness again. With millions tuning in, including many single men, what a great way to rub her ex’s nose in what he’s missing.

Every woman who’s been dumped will be voting for Helen: salute the sequined sisterhood!

With millions tuning in, including many single men, what a great way to rub her ex's nose in what he's missing

With millions tuning in, including many single men, what a great way to rub her ex’s nose in what he’s missing

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Categories
Australia

North-west Brisbane traffic and transport study draws heated debate between Labor state, LNP local governments

Queensland’s Transport Minister has described Brisbane City Council’s latest vision for a new toll road to relieve congestion in the city’s north-west as a “feeble fantasy” and a “farce”.

The six-lane tunnel, which would run between Bald Hills and connect with the Airport Link at Kedron, was part of the outcome of a $10 million federally-funded study undertaken over two years by the council.

It found northern Brisbane’s annual congestion and public transport crowding was costing $312 million per year.

That would rise to $538.5m by 2031 and $859m by 2041.

The study found significant community opposition towards any surface road or rail development through the North West Transport Corridor, which had been reserved by the state government since the 1980s.

Main Roads Minister Mark Bailey speaks to the media at a press conference on the Gold Coast on April 10, 2018.
Mr Bailey says the council had to cancel big projects yet released a study which recommended multi-billion-dollar road network infrastructure builds.(ABC News: Ashleigh Stevenson)

But Transport and Main Roads Minister Mark Bailey said the major toll road had been costed with “no funding, no consultation with other levels of government, and no idea how to fix congestion.”

He also criticized the council’s decision to cut projects in its June budget, citing the cost of rebuilding from February’s floods, yet unveil billions of dollars in new road infrastructure via the north-west transport study.

“Only a month ago, Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner was saying the council was broke and had to cut a lot of projects citywide and now they have a plan to spend $25 billion on new tollways and motorways,” Mr Bailey said.

“It is very clear this tired 20-year-old council is out of touch and out of ideas.

Man with light blonde hair stands at reading with microphones
Cr Schrinner has defended the study saying it offered solutions to a growing problem.(ABC News: Alicia Nally)

“Recently, Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner cut the North Brisbane Bikeway, cut upgrades to Mowbray Park, and refused to pay a fair share for the Cooper Plains level crossing removal because they are so broke, and yet here he is spending like a drunken sailor with his ridiculous $14 billion toll road plan.

“The state government had no input into the study that was funded by the former Morrison Government despite the state government owning the corridor which shows what a farce this announcement is.

“The immediate focus should be on upgrading services on Gympie Road, which we are already doing through the $72 million Northern Transitway project which we are fully funded.

“The study entirely ignores that project.

“Tell the Lord Mayor he is dreaming.”

‘Doing nothing not an option’

Yet, Cr Schrinner said the council had “done some planning work to assist” in reducing congestion in a burgeoning part of the city.

He also hit back at the state for setting aside land and not using it to improve transport networks.

artist impression of Gympie Rd transport upgrade
An artist’s impression shows a Gympie Rd precinct as part of north-west transport corridor improvement.(Supplied: Brisbane City Council)

“We’re concerned about what we see as a black hole for investment for infrastructure from the state government for the north-west suburbs,” Cr Schrinner said.

“That land was intended to be a transport corridor yet it has disappeared from any infrastructure plans and residents are asking what is going to happen in the north-western suburbs. The area is growing and there are no plans from the state government coming out.

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Categories
Sports

AFL Round Table Round 21

Our AFL experts tackle some of the burning questions ahead of Round 21, including if Carlton loss to Adelaide will cost them a finals spot, the Round 21 game with the biggest stakes and what we really think about Collingwood.


Has Carlton blown their chance at September action?

Rohan Connolly: I suspect they might have. Have just done a ladder predictor, and I have the Blues missing out by a game to the Bulldogs, with Richmond in seventh spot. Brisbane (away), Melbourne and Collingwood is a bloody tough assignment. It’s a pity, really, because their emergence has been exciting, and they’ve done it against a continual backdrop of injury. But the bottom line is they’ve been too erratic over the second half of this season, 4-5 since being 8-2 after 10 rounds. And the loss to St Kilda when the Saints were in ordinary shape and last Saturday night’s disaster are probably the nails in the coffin.

Jake Michaels: Yes, the loss to the Crows was disappointing and inexcusable for a side which has been spoken about all year as a flag chance, but Michael Voss’ side still controls its destiny and remains a hot favorite to play in September. The Blues really only need to win one of their remaining three games, and while they are all tough, I can’t seem to them ending the season on a four-game losing streak. They make it in but I’m starting to reconsider just how much damage they can do…

Matt Walsh: Which Carlton will we see the rest of the year? Is it the one which went 8-2 and looked irresistible at times? Or the one which gives up games to St Kilda and Adelaide without showing so much as a whimper? That will determine where they finish on the ladder. They’re currently a game and a half inside the eight with somewhat healthy percentage; if they can snag a win over one of Brisbane (at the Gabba), or Melbourne and Collingwood (at the MCG) after that, they should make it, but lose all three and it’s a wasted season and, frankly, a failure on Michael Voss.

Jarryd Barca: They haven’t blown their chance completely, but they stumbled at a critical hurdle in that loss to Adelaide which only makes their path to September a little rockier. Their best is as good as — if not better than — anyone in the competition which is why I’ve been bullish about them all season, but the difference between their best and worst still seems too stark. Let’s not overreact here, though, they might not always reach the true heights of their ceiling, but I fully expect them to bounce back hard in the next three weeks as good teams do and at least snag one win – which should be enough.

Which game this week will have the biggest impact on finals?

RC: Wow, it’s a great round and there’s perhaps four games you could realistically argue are the most important in this sense. But I’m probably inclined to go with Geelong vs. St Kilda because it could affect both the battle for top and the battle for eighth, Melbourne in a position to re-take top spot if it wins by enough and the Cats stumble, and the Saints out of the eight if they lose and either Richmond or the Western Bulldogs win by any amount. That’s a wide range of ramifications.

JM: I’m looking at Friday night’s tasty clash between the Demons and Magpies. Melbourne’s looking more like the Melbourne we’ve become accustomed to but a top four berth is still far from secure, especially with games to come against the Magpies, Blues and Lions. If Collingwood gets up here and beats the Dees for the second time in 2022, they not only put a firm grasp on their own top four hopes but send significant concerns through the Demons camp. Can’t wait for it.

MW: The Western Bulldogs-Fremantle clash suddenly has my interest after Freo’s capitulation on Friday night against Melbourne. The Dockers are outside the top four now, and while they’re still a chance to climb back up to secure the double chance, equally, the Dogs will be rare to take down a contender to keep their slim, but not outrageous finals hopes alive . After the Dockers, the Bulldogs face GWS and Hawthorn, and with Carlton missing, there’s a real chance that a win this week could help to throw up some crazy first-week finals.

JB: Brisbane hosting Carlton at the Gabba with both teams coming off different kinds of brutal losses is as mouth-watering as it gets, with the Lions still fighting for a top four berth which we know is critical for interstate teams, and the Blues eager not to let their grip on the top eight loosen any more than it is. In terms of impacting finals, the top four isn’t out of the question for Michael Voss if his side can pull of an unlikely upset, and we can preempt the pressure that will ensue wth defeat, while facing Brisbane up north in an elimination final is a scary proposition for whoever may still scrape into the lower echelons of the eight.

What’s your strongest opinion about Collingwood right now?

RC: That they have had a sensational season whatever happens from here, with huge improvement considering they finished 17th in 2021. And I don’t buy the “lucky” argument or the inevitably of them being “found out” when it matters. Yes, you need an element of fortune to win close games, but nine wins from 10 games decided by 11 points or less is too big a sample to be purely lucky. Indeed, I think the fact last year they played in six games decided by 12 points or less and lost five is a good tangible indicator of their improvement.

JM: The Magpies are nowhere near as good as their record suggests. I’ll admit I was wildly wrong about the Pies at the start of the season (predicting them to finish bottom four) but are they a top four side? not chance. Percentage is a great indicator of how a side is traveling and there are currently EIGHT sides who have a better percentage than the Pies. Enough said.

MW: I’ve been saying for weeks to look at the percentage – it’s the best guide for where a team is ‘really at’. They’ve ground out some hard-fought wins, and have at times been fortunate (there’s nothing wrong with saying that!) but they’re not a power club that I can see winning at the end, let alone convincingly. Much like Sydney last year, I can see them finishing with a ‘home’ final in the first week but losing to a more experienced side. Plenty to look forward to, though.

JB: That while they’ve greatly exceeded expectations this season, we probably should have seen a rise coming after last year’s abysmal efforts, given the experience they still have. It’s easy to overreact in this game and that’s what most of us did, but actually having a good on-field year amongst the wild off-field distractions — a trade period ‘fire sale’, the fallout from the ‘Do Better’ report , Eddie McGuire stepping down and the ongoing board speculation and eventual upheaval, the removal of head coach Nathan Buckley mid-year and a range of injuries to key players which stipulated the blooding and exposure of the list’s youth — is virtually unimaginable. A far cry from this season’s fortunes, the Pies also lost five matches last season by under two goals (two by one point), so were more competitive than their 17th-placed finished suggested. Nah, they’re probably not a 14-5 team, but they were never going to be that bad.

Which bottom six side are you most optimistic about in 2023?

RC: Hawthorn. I was more bullish than most about the Hawks even before this season, and while a 7-12 record is hardly anything to write home about, I think they haven’t been far off the mark at all, seven of their losses by 27 points or less. I’m pretty upbeat about their young guys, too. It’s a pretty big group, and the likes of Newcombe, Jiath, Lewis, Koschitzke, Ward, Maginness are coming along quickly. I sense Sam Mitchell as coach is building a pretty solid brand of game, too, which will keep improving.

JM: Call me crazy but I’m still bullish on the Bombers. I picked them to make finals this year and am as surprised as anyone by their nosedive. With the likes of Zach Merrett, Darcy Parish, Dylan Shiel, Andy McGrath and Jye Caldwell, there’s a nice group of youthful midfielders. Players like Peter Wright, Sam Draper, Nic Martin and Mason Redman have had breakout years and should only improve, while the defense has the personnel to be far better than they have been this season. With an easier fixture (which they will get) I’m tipping them to bounce back next season.

MW: Hawthorn is not yet a year into its planned reset with Sam Mitchell at the helm, and, for the most part, they’ve exceeded my expectations. They’ve already matched their 2021 win tally of seven, and we’ve seen a different take from Mitchell and at the selection table. Strides have been taken by Mitch Lewis and Jai Newcombe. We’ve seen Changkuoth Jiath become an assured rebounder. Will Day is stringing together games, Josh Ward has impressed… there’s a heap to like about this list. If they can attract a big name in the next season or two, they could be playing finals sooner rather than later.

JB: I agree with Jake on this one, although I didn’t have them making it this season, I fully expect the Bombers to bounce back and play finals footy in 2023. Their defense is sound with Jordan Ridley, Jayden Laverde, Jake Kelly and Redman holding the fort while developing tall Zach Reid is waiting in the wings, they have a diverse midfield group with a range of strengths that can cause serious damage, and key forwards Peter Wright and the ever-improving Harrison Jones can form one of the most formidable forward 50 partnerships in the league. The puzzle pieces are there at The Hangar.

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Categories
Australia

Sky News hosts Andrew Bolt and Chris Kenny clash over Anthony Albanese’s Indigenous Voice to Parliament

Sky News Australia hosts Andrew Bolt and Chris Kenny have clashed in a heated debate over the government’s Indigenous Voice to Parliament.

Kenny – a member of the senior advisory group that guided the Indigenous Voice co-design process – appeared on The Bolt Report on Monday night and told his fellow primetime host that allowing First Nations people to have their say on how to combat Indigenous disadvantage would give them “a fair go”.

“We want to overcome indigenous disadvantage because we have no mechanism for those indigenous Australians to actually have their say,” Kenny said.

“To tell us what they think will help redress health outcomes or employment outcomes or domestic violence in remote communities”

“We ought to allow those people to have a say. It’s a fair go.”

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But Bolt fired back and said it was “more than a fair go” pointing to the proportion of indigenous MPs in Parliament.

Of the 11 parliamentarians who identify as Indigenous there are three lower house MPs – Jana Stewart, Marion Scrymgour and Dr Gordon Reid – and seven Senators – Pat Dodson, Malarndirri McCarthy, Linda Burney, Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, Jacqui Lambie, Kerrynne Liddle, Dorinda Cox and Lydia Thorpe.

While Kenny said it was not “relevant”, Bolt replied by suggesting Voice would serve as a “separate parliament”.

“Nope. It’s not a separate parliament it’s an advisory body,” Kenny responded.

The Labor Government pushed the issue to the center of its agenda when Prime Minister Anthony Albanese declared on election night that there would be a referendum in his first term.

The Voice to Parliament was a key element of the 2017 Uluru Statement from the Heart and called for an elected Indigenous advisory body to the Federal Parliament.

The proposed body would advise the government on issues affecting First Nations people.

Bolt said the Voice would set up a “false dichotomy” and establish race as the defining difference between Australians.

“It stresses its race as the primary difference between us which I think is false, wrong and dangerous,” he said.

Kenny responded by saying that Indigenous Australians are the most disadvantaged people in the country.

“Now there is all sorts of complex reason for that but it is a national shame that their life expectancy is shorter,” he said.

“They are much less likely to finish school, to get an education, to get a job and we all want that.

“And I believe that requires some special attention from government.”

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