Plaintiff and Tiwi Elder Dennis Tipakalippa said he was“the happiest man alive” after the Federal Court ruled Santos’ approval to drill for gas in the sea north of the Tiwi Islands was invalid.Rebecca Parker reports.
Issue 1361
News
“MITA is worse than jail. People are losing their minds,” Joey Tangaloa Taualii, a prisoner inMelbourne Immigration Transit Accommodationtold a Refugee Action Collective forum. Chris Slee reports.
Activists and refugees leading the movement for their rights came together at the first Rural Australians for Refugees national conference in four years. Jonathan Strauss reports.
Hundreds rallied on Labor's so-called Day of Mourning, calling for the monarchy to be"abolished". Photos by Alex Bainbridge.
National Tertiary Education Union members went onstrike at the University of Newcastle and UTS for job security, manageable workloads, fair pay and for casuals to be given permanent contracts. Steve O'Brien and Kerry Smith report.
Progressive, grassroots activism was the winner in tightly contested elections for the NTEUBranch Committee and National Council elections at the University of Sydney. Markela Panegyres reports.
First Nations cultural heritage is under threat from multinational mining company Glencore’s coal mine expansion at the site of one of theFrontier Warsat Glendell, reports Pip Hinman.
Origin Energy’s decision to pull out of exploring and fracking at three sites is testament to the effectiveness of a grassroots campaign led by Traditional Owners. Pip Hinman reports.
Protesters demanded AUKUS be scrapped on September 16, a year since it was signed. Kerry Smith reports.
Residents and advocates gatheredto protest the state government’s proposal to demolish the Wentworth Park Road public housing estate. Isaac Nellist reports.
Residents told the Inner West Council itlack of consultation around its rezoning strategy was a serious misjudgement. Pip Hinman reports.
The Sydney Anti-AUKUS Coalition held a protest and candlelight vigil calling for the nuclear-poweredsubmarine dealto be scrapped, reports Peter Boyle.
Retail workers at Apple stores across the country have applied to the Fair Work Commission to take industrial action for a fair enterprise agreement. Isaac Nellist reports.
The resident campaign for an active transport bridge across the train tracks at Eveleigh is building up steam. Andrew Chuter reports.
Readings workersare resisting a two-year wage freeze and demanding a living wage, secure jobs and better working conditions. Jacob Andrewartha reports.
Analysis
Not only are we being told to prepare for war with China, but to expect it.It’s the stuff of nightmares, writes Sam Wainwright.
The establishment media's bias towards maintaining the status quo, or finding excuses for it, has to be challenged. Alex Bainbridge urges you tohelp鶹ý continue to provide a platform for activists challenging injustices.
The federal Treasurer tells us thatcost-of-living pressures are only going to get worse before they get better. Angela Carrargues that Labor must abandonits neoliberal approach.
Leading Socialist Alliance member Peter Boyle joins the 鶹ý Show to discuss the manufactured outpouring of pro-monarchist propaganda, the push for a republic and what real democratic change would look like.
The Brisbane Exhibition Centre is about to play host to Land Forces, a weaponsexpo. AsMiriam Torzillo andLilli Barto report,itis notnot about defencebut the business of war.
Australia’s operation of nuclear-powered submarines will make it the first non-nuclear weapon state to manipulate a loophole in the International Atomic Energy Agency inspection system. Binoy Kampmark reports.
Qantas CEO Alan Joyce’s aggressive cost-cutting program at the start of the pandemic has been blamed forQantas’s poor performance. Jim McIlroy argues Labor’sdecision to privatise Qantas in the early 1990s is the root cause.
Wangan and Jagalingou man Coedie MacAvoy outlined the strategy to take back country in Western Queensland and to stop the Adani Carmichael coal mine.
The proposed Voice to Parliament would mean little “meaningful change” forFirst Nations people, according to the Tasmanian Aboriginal Centre presidentGraeme Gardner. Isaac Nellist reports.
William Briggs arguesthe propaganda effort since the Queen's deathshowshowthe state has the power to evokea sense of unity between vastly different classes.
Aleks Wansbrough argues that the queen's passing shows how modern capitalism has atendency to uproot and decontextualise forms of cultural kinship and care, relativising everything as a commodity.
The Australian republican movement’s great mistake was to banish from discussion any reason beyond symbolism to be a republic. Aleks Wansbrough argues it effectively treatedthe royals as beyond reproach.
Many people in Anglo societies seemingly can’t imagine that the fairytale queen they recognise might look different to those who live in the countries from where the shining jewels in her crown and sceptre were stolen, writes Carlo Sands.
There is nothing better in these times than reading the words of James Connolly, the Irish republican, socialist and trade union leader, executed by the British firing squad on May 12, 1916, writes Sam Wainwright.
World
Protests have erupted across Iran after the Islamic fundamentalist state’s “morality police” arrested and tortured to death Mahsa Amina, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman, reports Peter Boyle.
While wind farms are touted as climate solutions, profit-hungry companies are actually causing widespread damage, reports Tamara Pearson.
The Swedish Social Democrats lost government and the country will now be led by conservatives reliant on the right-wing, xenophobic Sweden Democrats for support, reports Kjell Östberg.
Canadian politics took another step toward the far right with the election of Pierre Poilievre as leader of the federal Conservative Party on September 10, reports Jeff Shantz.
In the face of police persecution, activists have been fighting for years to end the US military’s use of Shannon Airport, writesVijay Prashad.
Don Fitz explores the intertwined reasons behind why life expectancy in the United States dropped almost three years between 2019–21, while, in Cuba, it rose by 0.2 years.
Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico in 2017. Then the power grid was privatised in 2020. Now this, reports Jon Queally.
The new king, however powerful, will not be able to solve the new prime minister’s dilemmas regarding Britain’s deep economic and social crisis, writes Martin Clarke.
More than 61% of voters rejected Chile’s new constitution. This was a punishment for the Gabriel Boric government’s inability to address the problems of the people, writeTaroa Zúñiga SilvaandVijay Prashad.
Twenty-one-year-old white supremacist and soldier Killian Ryan was arrested and discharged from the army for lying on a form, but his threats to kill Black people were seemingly overlooked, reports Malik Miah.
John Pilger asks, isn’t it time those who are meant to keep the record straight declared their independence and decoded the propaganda?
Culture
A crowdfunding campaign has been launched to create a new documentary film covering the 2016 Bendigo Street occupation in inner-city Melbourne, reports Elizabeth Bantas.
Mariza Sollano talksabout a new film portraying the lives and tribulations of student activists during martial law in the Philippines, which will be screening around the country in October.
In the Italian filmThe Inner Cage, suspense builds as prison guards find themselves lumped together with inmatesin a crumbling gaol. Barry Healy reviews.
Hans Baer reviews Clive Hamilton's new memoir, and poses some uncomfortable questions.
A newly restored version of this powerful film recording the establishment of the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberrais set for national release, reports Ben Radford.
Readers can now connect with 鶹ý on the video-sharing platform TikTok. Isaac Nellist reports.
InterPlay is a playful and community-minded interactive art exhibition, inviting audiences to experience art in a way that explores our environment. Darren Saffin reports.
Conservationist and author William (Bill) deBuys recently published The Trail to Kanjiroba, amemoir of two journeys through the mountainous Upper Dolpo region of Nepal. He discusses his work with Bill Nevins.