Friday, 15 May 2026

Seven dead, scores missing in Kyiv after Russian drone hits apartment building.

Extract from ABC News

A woman holding her hands to her face and crying as she looks off camera.

Residents of a Kyiv apartment building were seen in tears after Thursday's attack. (AP: Efrem Lukatsky)

In short: 

Seven people are dead and at least 20 believed missing after a Russian drone struck an apartment building in Kyiv on Thursday, local time.

The attack was part of a third straight day of widespread attacks on targets across Ukraine.

Russia is intensifying its attacks on population centres despite Vladimir Putin remarking that the war is near its end.

Archaeologists work to restore colonial-era boat found during construction of Barangaroo metro.

Extract from ABC News

By Julia André

Why Pope Leo rejects the logic of modern war.

Extract from Eureka Street 

  • Andrew Hamilton
  • 07 May 2026                                   

 

In recent weeks, Pope Leo XIV has spoken out strongly in favour of peace and has deplored war in the context of the Middle East and other conflicts. In doing so he has also spoken on behalf of the Catholic Church against attempts to justify going to war on Christian grounds. The press and liberal critics of President Trump have seen these remarks as an attack on the President. So has President Trump himself. As a result, the Pope and the Catholic Church more generally have become the flavour of the month for critics of the President, much to the delight of those Catholics who prize such favour. The Pope, however, has denied that he was targeting individuals.

His denial deserves reflection because it discloses the three groups whom Pope Leo represents and the different audiences with whom he engages.

Pope Leo speaks first as a Christian believer. At the heart of his faith is trust in a God who loves each human being dearly and joins humanity in Jesus to free people from the chains of sin. Christ embodies God’s love as he reaches out to the poorest and most ostracised members of society, gathers a small community committed to radical trust and love, is rejected by religious authorities and their Roman overlords, is tortured and killed, and then rises to deliver the promise of life beyond death, of God’s mercy over human sin, and of a community committed to living out his radical way in gratitude.

Central to this faith is recognition of the high value of every human being, a commitment to love and non-violence, a realistic assessment of the lethal consequences of fear, selfishness and anger, and hope in God’s accompaniment. It advocates a preference for peacemaking. When addressing both fellow Christians and other audiences on the subject of war, Pope Leo speaks out of this faith and focuses on the suffering of war’s victims.

Second, Pope Leo also addresses Catholic Christians as Bishop of Rome. In the Catholic Church, he and his fellow bishops are responsible for encouraging a lived and authentic faith among Catholics in their communal life and in their engagement with the world outside the Church. In these interactions they believe that God’s Spirit is at work. In his speeches Pope Leo addresses the Catholic Church, comforts people who suffer, pleads for peace and negotiation, deplores war, and refutes any claim made for its religious justification.

Third, Pope Leo speaks to people of all religions and of none as a fellow sinful human being who is also a Christian and the Catholic Pope. To this general audience he insists that each human life is precious and that persons are not to be treated as a means to a strategic end. This conviction lies at the heart of the Christian Gospel. He addresses both people who share this high view of human life but ground it differently, and those who regard some human lives as expendable.

This public conversation naturally focuses on just war theory, whose initiation is attributed to St Augustine but which has been refined both in Catholic teaching and in international law to respond to the changing shapes of war. It describes the conditions that both the decision to go to war and the actions involved in it must meet if they are to be considered just. To be justified, a war must satisfy each of these conditions.

 

“Respect for the human dignity of each person leads him to mourn for, and plead the cause of, those who are victims of war and to insist on diplomacy instead of warfare.”

 

It must be legitimately declared, it must be a last resort after diplomacy has failed, it must be fought for a just cause, it must pursue an attainable objective, and ensure that the harm and destruction caused by the war are proportionate to the good sought in it. Similar conditions also govern the actions taken in pursuit of its goals. They exclude the killing of non-combatants or prisoners and require that the damage caused to persons and society by any action be proportionate.

In his recent remarks on war, Pope Leo does not appeal directly to just war theory. But it is central to the development of Catholic reflection on war and underlies his constant insistence on negotiation, conversation and mediation as alternatives to war. Catholic reflection on war, as enunciated by recent Popes, has come close to concluding that modern war is always unjustifiable because of the destructive power of modern weapons, which destroy human lives and relationships far beyond the sites of conflict. War also breeds the hatred that seeds further wars. Only the case of armed resistance to an unjust invasion holds back a total condemnation of war.

This analysis suggests why Pope Leo speaks so uncompromisingly against modern wars, focuses so closely on the persons who are the direct and indirect victims of war, and has denied that he is condemning President Trump and other leaders in his remarks about war. Respect for the human dignity of each person leads him to mourn for, and plead the cause of, those who are victims of war and to insist on diplomacy instead of warfare. The same respect for human dignity calls Pope Leo to engage respectfully even with those responsible for war. Even when, in their own conduct, they may fail to show that same respect.

 

 

 

Andrew Hamilton is consulting editor of Eureka Street, and writer at Jesuit Social Services.

Chalmers challenges the politics of negative gearing.

 Extract from Eureka Street

  • David James
  • 14 May 2026                                  

 

It had to happen eventually. The federal government’s decision to abolish negative gearing on property investment, with the exception of newly built homes, has gone a long way towards correcting the biggest distortion in Australian society: the tripling of property prices this century, which has made it impossible for most younger people to own their own home. Among other things, it has been a factor preventing many people from starting their own families.

The government will, in parallel, abolish the 50 per cent capital gains tax discount on properties held for more than a year, replacing it with a deduction indexed to inflation. This is less dramatic than it might appear. The 50 per cent policy was introduced because it was claimed, implausibly, that calculating the effect of inflation was difficult and that using the 50 per cent figure would simplify it.

Goodness knows why; it is not difficult. A simple Google search will tell you that an asset bought in Australia in 2010 would have had its purchasing power reduced by approximately 35 per cent by 2026 because of cumulative inflation. That is fairly close to the 50 per cent discount. Investors who got into the market a long time ago will not be greatly affected, whereas more recent buyers will.

For the purists, removing negative gearing is an unjustified move because, as a general principle, interest costs in, say, a business can be used to reduce tax liability. But for anyone who lives in the real world in Australia, it should have been obvious that negative gearing is the main reason we have a property bubble, and that it had to be brought under control at some point.

Negative gearing, whereby rental losses can be used to reduce tax on other forms of income, is not unique to Australia. Germany, Japan, Canada and Norway all have similar approaches, including allowing unused losses to be carried forward to offset future tax liabilities. Other countries, including the US, have less generous approaches, and the UK has abolished it. The country whose policies are closest to Australia’s is Canada, and its household debt is even worse than ours, at 130 per cent of GDP.

More than a fifth of all residential dwellings in Australia are held by property investors, equating to more than 2.2 million houses. About a fifth of taxpayers own at least one investment property, and they have been receiving about a third of total housing finance. It has become the nation’s favourite financial pastime.

Investors can typically outbid younger buyers because they have collateral from the home in which they live, whereas first-home buyers tend to rely on whatever savings they have cobbled together. That is what is most likely to change with the abolition of negative gearing. First-home buyers will no longer find themselves being outbid by older investors.

 

“It has rather been the banks’ willingness to lend, especially to investors, that has driven up prices and financialised the whole country, turning a fifth of the population into property gamblers.”

 

Negative gearing has had a dramatic effect on tax receipts. Approximately $7.4 billion in revenue has been forgone by the government this financial year, which equates to about a quarter of the budget deficit. That figure will not drop quickly, however, because the changes apply only to new purchases. The policy is unchanged for investors who have already bought.

There will be an impact on share investment and cryptocurrency purchases, because the capital gains tax changes apply to any asset. That will increase the incentive to hold shares for longer in order to gain the benefit of inflation indexing.

Politically, the calculation is revealing. The government is breaking its promises from before the last election, which is anything but new. It has probably done so because the main beneficiaries, baby boomers, who bought when prices were far lower, are declining as a proportion of total voters. The last federal election was the first in which Gen Z and Millennials outnumbered Baby Boomers.

This writer can recall running a column more than 20 years ago by Mark Latham in Business Review Weekly in which he argued for the abolition of negative gearing. He was ridiculed from all sides, presumably because at the time it was seen as electoral suicide. That is no longer the case.

Apart from the greater fairness of the policy for anyone under 40, it will at least start to slow the severity of the property-price bubble, which about a year ago reached valuation levels comparable to the peak of Japan’s 1989 property bubble relative to GDP.

Japan’s excesses went down in folklore as the most ridiculous ever seen. It was claimed at the time that the property around the Emperor’s Imperial Palace was worth more than the state of California. Australia has actually surpassed that. Hopefully, we will not have a crash like the one that has kept Japan in permanent recession for 35 years.

Yet again, there is no mention of the real culprit in these excesses: the banks. It has not been a supply-and-demand problem, or the result of high immigration, neither of which explains the extent of the bubble. Property developers do have a disproportionate effect on state governments, and they have manipulated the supply of land. But the idea that there is a shortage of land in Australia is completely risible. Australia is one of the least densely populated countries on Earth, fourth after Greenland, Mongolia and Namibia.

Rather, it has been the banks’ willingness to lend, especially to investors, that has driven up prices and financialised the whole country, turning a fifth of the population into property gamblers. As that effect weakens, banks’ profits are also likely to slow. After all, the reason the banks were so willing to lend is that the bigger the mortgage, the more money they make.

One hopes that as the attractiveness of property investment eases, Australians with money to invest will turn to more productive options, rather than financial manipulation. Financialisation of any sort — the making of money out of money — is, in the end, a dead end that destroys societies.

 


David James is a finance and business journalist. His Substack is: https://davidjames.substack.com/

 

Thursday, 14 May 2026

Israeli strikes on vehicles near Lebanon capital Beirut kill at least 12.

Extract from ABC News

Multiple people stand around a burning car trying to extinguish the flames.

An Israeli airstrike hit a car in the Lebanese coastal town of Jiyeh, south of Beirut. (AP Photo/Mustafa Jamalddine)

In short:

Israeli strikes on vehicles have killed at least 12 people in Lebanon, according to Lebanon's health ministry.

Militant group Hezbollah and Israel have continued trading blows despite a US-mediated ceasefire announced last month.

What's next?

Representatives from Israel and Lebanon are due to meet for two days of peace talks in the United States.

Six dead as Russia launches over 800 drones at Ukraine.

 Extract from ABC News

A firefighter spraying water on the smouldering remains of a bombed building.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says six people are dead after one of Russia's biggest drone attacks of the war so far. (Reuters/State Emergency Service of Ukraine)

In short:

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says six people are dead in one of Russia's biggest drone attacks of the war so far.

At least 800 drones were launched by Russia's military.

It came as authorities in Russia's capital Moscow ordered restrictions on the spread of photos of drone attacks.

Wednesday, 13 May 2026

Labor bets the house on young Australians' desperation to buy their own.

Extract from ABC News 

Analysis

Albanese looks at Chalmers. Both men are in suites, looking serious

Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers have made generational equity the test for this budget. (ABC News: Callum Flinn)