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Byron Shire
June 22, 2026

Forces of darkness hasten humanity’s destruction

Latest News

The NT intervention laws that shape lives

This Sunday marks 19 years since the then Howard Government announced the Northern Territory Intervention laws – ‘The Intervention’ began with a media release by Mal Brough, Minister for Indigenous Affairs, on June 21, 2007.

Other News

AI: Artificial Intelligence, or Artificial Inflation?

It feels as if AI is everywhere – whether it’s those intrusive bots on every website or every headline about how it’s either going to be a boon for humanity, or end us.

Speaking and listening

All of a sudden Council’s supposed experts condemn the Wilsons Creek weir water quality during rain events, which would...

Police chase stolen vehicle in Tweed, man charged

Police say a man will face court today charged after an alleged pursuit in a stolen vehicle at Tweed Heads yesterday morning.

Will council support community participation in MHS development?

This Thursday (today), Byron Shire Council (BSC) will be discussing the establishment of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between Byron Shire Council and Homes NSW (HNSW) as well as the potential for a Community Assessment Panel for the old Mullumbimby Hospital site.

Caring for community

The Rotary Club of Mullumbimby presented a cheque for $10,000 to the Brunswick Surf Life Saving Club (BSLSC) in support of its ongoing operations.

Difficult times

We live in difficult times: so it’s good to know some things are certain; the sun will rise in...

End of the world as we know it? Cloudcatcher Media

Another COP has concluded in Brazil, with petrostates and their corporate allies ripping up the global road map leading us away from fossil fuels, encouraged by the absence of the USA and with China failing to take the opportunity to step into the vacuum. President Lula’s hope that the nearby presence of the lungs of the world (otherwise known as the Amazon) might focus the minds of attendees proved forlorn. The fire which broke out in the final days of negotiations said it all.

Australia was reportedly not even present at some of the key meetings, focused instead on side meetings lobbying for the next COP, which will now be held in Türkiye, the location of this country’s favourite military failure, Gallipoli.

Chris Bowen will be COP’s President of Negotiations, which Anthony Albanese says will bring ‘attention to the existential threat climate change poses’ to the Pacific region, while his government pushes on with fossil fuel developments large and small, in a state of blissful hypocrisy.

Senator Peter Whish-Wilson in happier times. Wikipedia/CC

Disinformation

The whole thing was a victory for disinformation, which was also the subject of our own parliament’s recent Select Committee on Information Integrity on Climate Change and Energy, championed by outgoing Tasmanian Greens Senator Peter Whish-Wilson, in what is likely to be his last hurrah before he retires from politics in disgust.

Senator Whish-Wilson battled to get News Corp Australia’s representatives and others to show some contrition and tell the truth about their role in telling Australians the sky is pink, while two senators with strong links to the coal industry, One Nation’s Malcolm Roberts and the Nationals’ Matt Canavan, did their best to sabotage the whole enquiry from within.

The Deputy Chair of the Committee, ALP Senator Michelle Ananda-Rajah, sought intermittently to keep proceedings on track.

News Corp executive Michael Miller said the whole thing was social media’s fault, describing these platforms as ‘the true monsters at our gates’. He refused to accept the premise, from both external critics and insiders, that his own organisation championed climate disinformation across its ‘news’ outlets.

Senator Whish-Wilson pressed on: ‘Why do you repeatedly platform climate sceptics across your newspapers?’

Mr Miller responded: ‘I hope you’re not suggesting we should censor them’.

News Corp’s Campbell Reid then denied that they were operating a coordinated denial machine, despite all evidence to the contrary. Digging deeper, the News Corp men refused to admit that their own masthead The Australian had an agenda-setting power, suggesting that each News Corp publication set its own editorial course.

A discussion followed about the misinformation propagated by Andrew Bolt on Sky News and elsewhere that wind turbines kill whales, thoroughly debunked, but repeated as recently as this week by the Nationals’ Barnaby Joyce.

Senator Matt Canavan pretending to be a coal miner on Twitter/X.

Senator Canavan then waded in and said ‘Greens don’t care about whales any more’.

Senator Whish-Wilson pressed him for evidence of his assertion that wind turbines had caused an increase on whale beachings on the eastern coast of the USA, before Canavan belatedly admitted that he ‘didn’t know’ about the issue.

What is the media’s responsibility?

Matt Canavan attacked the News Corp reps for running occasional positive stories about net zero and defended the indefensible coal seam gas industry in Queensland, before Senator Ananda-Rajah attempted to pin Murdoch’s executives down on their long history of climate misinformation, saying ‘I would put it to you that you are abrogating your responsibility as a major media organisation to actually do your job.

‘It is not good enough to say, others will debunk our misinformation and our claims and our sloppy work because that’s how democracy works… You don’t get a “get out of jail” on this. I put it to you that you need to do better. What kind of processes have you put in place to ensure that this kind of thing is minimised going into the future?’

The News Corp representatives said they didn’t agree with her conclusions, and would take her question on notice.

Read it and weep

Having been deluged by submissions, the Select Committee on Information Integrity on Climate Change and Energy has just been granted an extension, and will now present its final report on Tuesday, 24 March 2026.

The complete transcript of the hearings is already available here for anyone who wants to see the degree to which Australia has been taken over by fossil fuel interests and their useful idiots in the parliament and media.

Speaking of useful idiots, Federal Environment Minister Murray Watt is ramping up the pressure on non-Labor members of parliament to support his regressive changes to environment laws this week, while Lismore’s own Kevin Hogan, who is apparently the new ‘retail politics’ man in the Nationals, made a series of appearances on social and conventional media advancing the myth that the hopelessly compromised net zero idea will somehow cost Australians more than doing nothing about the climate crisis.

Goddess help us.


David Lowe
David Lowe. Photo Tree Faerie.

Originally from Canberra, David Lowe is an award-winning filmmaker, writer and photographer with particular interests in the environment and politics. He’s known for his campaigning work with Cloudcatcher Media.

You can find more of his writing at Patreon and Gumroad.

 



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Hemp industry given boost with development plan

A Hemp Industry Development Plan has been announced by the NSW government, which promises 'to unlock new opportunities for NSW businesses and add value to the state's low-THC hemp industry, which is forecast to become a $100 million Australian industry by 2032'.

Gambling harm recognised by Tweed Council, supported by Wesley Mission

Faith-based, not-for-profit organisation providing community services in NSW, Wesley Mission, has welcomed Tweed Shire Council’s decision to publicly recognise the impact of gambling harm and advocate for stronger harm-minimisation measures.

Winter Warmer fundraiser for homelessness

The annual Winter Warmer Homelessness Relief campaign, hosted by Dharma Care, will return for 2026 with cabaret at Salt, Kingscliff, on Thursday 2 July, headlined by comedian Mandy Nolan, interactive performance artist The Space Cowboy and the Kinship Doobai Dancers, with a Welcome to Country from Aunty Jackie.

Tweed Shire Council presents flood resilience series – part one

Over the coming weeks, Tweed Shire Council will present a flood resilience series, which looks at how 'Tweed's story is different from the standard flood recovery narrative and what happened next'.