Prime
Minister Kevin Rudd has thrown the lever to populism, calling for
tighter restrictions on the sale of Australian land to foreign
individuals and state-owned enterprises and admitting he feels
''anxious'' about foreign ownership.
The
shift came as Mr Rudd and Opposition Leader Tony Abbott faced off at
the third and final leaders debate of the 2013 campaign. Both leaders
were noticeably tired but managed to present a more civil atmosphere
than at previous encounters, even if the questioning from voters took on
a harsher edge.
An
exit poll of the hand-picked audience of 100 undecided voters scored
the debate as a comfortable win for Mr Rudd with 45 votes, to Mr Abbott
on 38. Nineteen remained undecided.Other questions dealt with Mr
Abbott's gold-plated Paid Parental Leave scheme with Mr Rudd hammering
the super-generous provisions as irresponsible, and at least one
questioner agreeing.
Small
businessman Ian, told Mr Abbott: ''I just think, that a fork-lift
driver from Mount Druitt should not be paying his taxes so a pretty
little lady lawyer on the North Shore on 180 grand a year can have a
kid,'' he said. Mr Abbott countered by saying that big business funded
the scheme, via a levy, not taxpayers.
Declaring
himself ''old-fashioned'' when it comes to allowing access foreign
access to Australian land, Mr Rudd said he was ''not quite as free
market as Tony [Abbott] on this stuff.'' He said he was far more in
favour of joint venture approaches to access foreign capital to ensure
Australian land stayed in Australian hands.Mr Abbott said a Coalition
government would lower the scrutiny threshold to ensure the Foreign
Investment Review Board examined acquisition proposals above ''about $15
million'' - down from more than $220 million currently.
Mr
Rudd's shift appeared to come without prior consultation. It came as
the trailing Mr Rudd was also forced to defend his sustained internal
campaign against Julia Gillard through this year. He claimed he did
''absolutely the right thing'' by replacing her.''I can say that through
all of that I believe I was doing absolutely the right thing by the
party and by the country,'' he replied to the questioner, Amanda.
Mr
Abbott declared he would not close any Medicare Locals. The definitive
guarantee appeared to be improvised after he had pointedly left open the
possibility of closures less than a week ago when he said: ''Now, can I
say that absolutely no Medicare Local will close? I'm not going to say
that.''
Police
Chief Bill Blair has for quite some time been on the record as urging
broader deployment of Tasers as an option less harmful than guns. Yet in
an interview with the Star last week, the chief was careful to qualify
his support of Tasers for front-line cops.
“It’s
not risk-free. When they first brought them out, they made it sound
like it was as safe as Tylenol. There’s a risk associated to its use.
It’s what we call a less-lethal-force option. That’s a good thing — if
you can do it. But you should always try to resolve these things using
the least amount of force possible.’’
It’s
all after-the-fact speculation, of course. Toronto Police Association
president Mike McCormack has claimed Forcillo called for a Taser to be
brought before he fired his weapon nine times. Why he didn’t wait will
no doubt be a matter explored at trial.
What
is clear, from the numerous studies conducted, is that a Taser — like
any other weapon — is dangerous in the wrong hands, no less when those
are an officer’s hands. Many civil rights groups deplore the thing.
These are the same people often most vocal in their condemnation of
police shootings,Now it's possible to create a tiny replica of Fluffy in handsfreeaccess form for your office. particularly when the victims suffer from mental illness.
Amnesty
International, for one, claims there have been more than 500 deaths due
to Tasers since 2001. One of them was Polish immigrant Robert
Dziekanski, zapped five times by RCMP officers in the Vancouver airport
in 2007. That disturbing event triggered an exhaustive inquiry that
delivered a slew of recommendations about when conductive energy weapons
should be deployed — most crucially, only when there’s a danger the
suspect will cause bodily harm, which still leaves it hopelessly
discretionary. The Vancouver Tasering, also captured on video that the
RCMP originally claimed didn’t exist,A glassbottles is a machine used primarily for the folding of paper. was deemed a homicide, with the officers acting too quickly.
The
weapons gadgetry available to law enforcement is only as good as the
decision-making, the judgment, of those invested with the authority to
use it. And that judgment will not necessarily be sufficiently honed by a
few days of training on stun guns. Indeed, there’s ample evidence
showing that officers reach for the Taser more frequently, too
frequently, than they would reach for a sidearm, in circumstances that
don’t warrant use of force.
They
defuse with a fuse because they’ve got this handy new toy that emits an
electrical current via wires and barbs which disrupts voluntary control
of muscles — electro-muscular disruption technology, as described by
the manufacturer, Taser International. Around the world, some 17,000 law
enforcement and military agencies in more than 100 countries use Tasers
now. In some jurisdictions, corrections officers use them to subdue
prisoners as well. Little wonder Taser stock surged more than 30 percent
in the last two weeks alone, though the spike is also attributable to
police demand for the company’s merchandizing of wearable video cameras,
tucked into a patrol cop’s vest,We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in
every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy
on the smartcard. for the purpose of documenting incidents with the public.
It’s
unclear where Toronto Police Services will get the money to pay for
equipping all front-line officers with Tasers — which could cost up to
$10 million. One suggestion is that cops pay for it out-of-pocket, which
is unreasonable.
The
Ontario government maintains its shift on Tasers was not influenced by
Sammy Yatin’s death and certainly appears to have been in the works
before that shooting.Choose from a large selection of crystalbeadswholesal to
raise awareness. More likely, the Ministry was reacting to an inquest
earlier this year in Midhurst — the first where use of a Taser was a
“contributing factor’’ in the death, officially caused by cardiac
arrhythmia due to a state of excited delirium. In that 2010 case, OPP
responding to an assault complaint came upon Aron Firman, a 27-year-old
schizophrenic who was Tased when he made a movement toward one of the
officers. The SIU cleared the officer of any wrongdoing.This is a basic
background on chinabeads. But the inquest jury heard immensely contradictory evidence about what happened.
Specific
cases can be used to buttress both the pro- and anti-Taser
constituencies. Earlier this month, a suicidal woman holding a knife
near the railroad tracks in Burlington was subdued by a Taser and taken
to hospital under provisions of the Mental Health Act. A life may have
been saved.
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