Saturday, December 22, 2007
Nobbys Headland Sell Off is an Outrage!
The people of Newcastle are being held to ransom to accept the privatisation of Nobbys as the only means of gaining access our iconic heart. This is untrue. Remove the Nazi concentration style fence and allow people up there to see the beautiful view for free. The vested interests don't want that to happen. Why?
Contrary to the assertion by the developer that they consulted widely on the matter, the fact is that this development was never adequately discussed by our elected democratic Council. It was referred back to the Port Corporation, the very people responsible for the public/private partnership in the first place. (see NCC Minutes for the Development Application Committee 11 July 2006 - DA 05/0468 – 41) How transparent and fair is that?
Nobbys lighthouse and headland should stand open and free to the public 24/7. No strings attached.
While we bicker and argue, and display complete ignorant arrogance of our history, Newcastle is being written out of the National story. And these people say, why care? Heritage is not important. I beg to differ. Our heritage is very important as it enables us to understand who we were, who we are, and who we intend to be. That is supremely important, much more important than selling your soul for a few pieces of silver.
Yours sincerely and Merry Christmas to all,
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Cameron (1922-1995)

"Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of work by Cameron (1922–1995), curated by Michael Duncan, George Herms, and Nicole Klagsbrun. The exhibition runs from January 12 until February 10, 2007. An opening reception will be held on Friday, January 12, from 6–8 pm. This survey is the first solo gallery exhibition of artist, performer, poet, and occult practitioner, Cameron (Marjorie Cameron Parsons Kimmel). A maverick follower of the esoteric mysticism of Aleister Crowley and his philosophical group, the OTO (Ordo Templi Orientis), Cameron was also an accomplished painter and draftsman and mentor to younger artists and poets such as Wallace Berman, George Herms, and David Meltzer. While enlisted in the Navy, she was assigned the tasks of drawing maps and working in a photographic unit, which led to attendance at art classes after being discharged. In Los Angeles, she became the wife and spiritual avatar of scientist and mystical thinker Jack Parsons (1914–1952), one of the founders of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and an influential leader of the OTO. In the early 1950s, Cameron met the fellow LA artist and jazz enthusiast Wallace Berman who was fascinated by her artwork, poetry, and mystical aura. In 1955 Berman used his photograph of Cameron as the cover of his literary and artistic journal Semina and included in the issue a drawing she had made the previous year. The drawing became renowned when the police cited it as “lewd” and shut down Berman’s 1957 exhibition at Ferus Gallery. After this experience, Cameron, like Berman, refused to show her art in commercial galleries. She remained, however, a crucial figure in the Berman circle. Cameron’s romantic aesthetic and commanding persona prompted filmmaker Curtis Harrington to commemorate her output as a visual artist in The Wormwood Star (1955), a lyrical short film recording the art and atmosphere of her candlelit studio. Filmmaker Kenneth Anger cast her in a leading role opposite Anäis Nin in his film Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome (1954). Despite the grim fatality of much of her writings, Cameron’s artworks portray a fanciful, even wistful lyricism. In the early 1960s she corresponded with Joseph Campbell, citing her interest in his book The Hero with a Thousand Faces, as well as in the fiction of Hermann Hesse and Isak Dinesen. Consumed by myth and the idea of protean growth, Cameron depicted the process of metamorphosis and transformation in hundreds of line drawings where ominous figures and landscapes emerge from uniformly striated, passionately articulated ink marks. Other gouache drawings and paintings depict mythic figures of her own creation engaged in ritualistic, symbolic acts."
The Gallery images are still available through the site, just click on past exhibitions, and scroll down.
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Rising Tide - People's Blockade of Newcastle Harbour 2007
The family had a wonderful day at this event organised to protest the ongoing failure of Governments to properly tackle the transition from fossil fuels to real clean renewable energy solutions. Good on Rising Tide! The kids and I had a great time paddling around on canoes. I hadn't done any canoeing since 1977!
Saturday, June 9, 2007
Newcastle - Welcome to the Future

It is tragically ironic that such devastating climate chaos was unleashed on
How dare this arrogant Government sentence future generations to this kind of climate mess.
I found Frank Sartor’s performance on Friday night’s Stateline equally shocking. The ‘Why stop raping, as someone else in the world will rape if we don’t’ logic to the expansion of the fossil fuel industry is ethically moribund.
It is now obvious that the coal ship traffic jam was an engineered publicity stunt gone wrong to put pressure on the general public to bury their (justified) climate change concerns, stomach these new mines and continue to allow NSW Inc. to go on with business as usual.
We are living under a fossil fuel dictatorship.
Unfortunately this ‘black river of gold’ has turned into a river of mud, and one of the ships has beached itself like a biblical whale. Welcome to the future?
We again call upon the NSW Government to stop its blockade of a clean and green future for our region and completely detox our fossil fuel addiction by 2020.
Sunday, April 29, 2007
No More Shootout for Newcastle?
I find it very sad and outrageous that such a wonderful event as the Newcastle Shootout will possibly move to another city because Newcastle City Council won’t fund it (Weekender, NH 28/4:7).
Why must we have to stomach the divisive debate of having to choose between a new
Why don’t we have similar recourse to withdraw funding from those areas of Council that come up with these hit lists to our essential cultural services?
And why given the financial mess hasn’t the General Manager been made accountable?
Sunday, April 22, 2007
Media Massacre at Virginia Tech
It is not appropriate for the media to shed such light and publicity on the individual who perpetrated those crimes in the
We live in an “image is everything”( – to quote the Nike add) soaked world, and such overt displays create a distinct impression on similar disaffected people who, like most of us, feel some form of disconnect from modern society. Having this guy’s personal film diaries, and notebooks and other testaments of his anguish on public show turns him into a glorified You Tube sensation. Whether you like it or not it will attract admirers. Is this necessary?
The real story is how we (and more importantly the
New Coal Loader for the Hunter Region
Frank Sartor's decision to approve a third coal loader and expand another in order to send out an extra 100 million tonnes of coal into a world facing environmental catastrophe is a monumental error of judgment. (SMH ''Coal Exports to Double'' 14/4) It will stand as the greatest folly of our generation.
If this decision was a balanced one, as Frank Sartor stated it was (Newcastle Herald ''1 Bn Fix for Hunter Coal'' 14/4), then one billion dollars should have poured into renewable energy technology research and development as well. We have such a facility on Steel River Mayfield known as the CSIRO that could do with the funding. Instead, it is languishing.
Why? Due to poor political leadership renewable energy innovation has been sidelined for the “Clean Coal” solution, also known as the “Stick you Head in the Sand Solution” or the “All the Way with Coal We Say” chorus.
Politicians have campaigned that they want balance in the debate. This is impossible with decisions such as this one.
We have a public transport system that is a mess. We need buses every ten minutes and free, so that catching one becomes easy and effortless. A 1 Billion fix to our public transport system across the nation would be a wonderful investment as well.
Renewable energy and public transport, these are decisions which would deliver Governments great praise. Instead we have no future.
My sincere hope is that this decision is recinded immediately. Please, for the sake of future generations make this happen.
People need to understand that life is not just about money and power.
In order to achieve a future that is not in perpetual war we all need to find a new way to conduct our business on Earth.
This decision will not get us there.