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Future doom and the rose-coloured past

Why do we see the past through rose-coloured glasses, but not the future? Psychologists tell us that human beings have a tendency to be fearful and pessimistic about the future, while simultaneously romanticising the past. If the theory is true, it might help explain the difficulties we often have in making informed decisions and effectively planning for the future.



  • Psychology
  • Science and Technology
  • Community and Society

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Google’s future city; the space-wide web; and how the ancients strategized for the future

Get an update on Google’s controversial proposal to take over the construction and regulation of a section of Toronto; learn about how the ancient Athenians used Tragedy to guide their future decision-making and follow the rush to develop low-orbit satellites to secure the future of the Internet.  




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Strengthening public interest journalism while defending media freedom

A tale of two media environments: in the US, journalistic freedom is increasingly under threat from demonising rhetoric and the violent personal targeting of reporters; while in Ethiopia, the country’s new leader has opened the gate to press freedom. What can we learn from both experiences?




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Controlled Environmental Agriculture

Controlled Environmental Agriculture promises to be cleaner and greener. It’s focussed on technology and it’s essentially about bringing food production closer to the point of consumption. We examine the potential and the pitfalls.



  • Science and Technology
  • Agribusiness
  • Sustainable and Alternative Farming

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Artificial intelligence, ethics and education

AI holds enormous potential for transforming the way we teach, but first we need to define what kind of education system we want. Also, the head of the UK’s new Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation warns democratic governments that they urgently need an ethics and governance framework for emerging technologies.





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Our changing media environment and a call to “decomputerise”

In this episode, we look ahead to the news and broader media environment in 2020 and pressing issues for local content in a globalised world. We also hear about the need to “decomputerise” in order to decarbonise. 




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Prescient Predictions: 1984; Brave New World; and Network

The dystopian best-seller 1984 was published exactly seventy years ago. Its influence has been profound. But does it really speak to today’s politico-cultural environment?




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Future doom and the rose-coloured past

Why do we see the past through rose-coloured glasses, but not the future? Psychologists tell us that human beings have a tendency to be fearful and pessimistic about the future, while simultaneously romanticising the past. If the theory is true, it might help explain the difficulties we often have in making informed decisions and effectively planning for the future.



  • Psychology
  • Science and Technology
  • Community and Society

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Can the United Nations be reformed?

The United Nations Secretariat is now one-year into a significant reform program aimed at making the organisation fit for purpose in the 21st Century. It’s being driven by Secretary General Antonio Guterres. In this program we look at what that package entails and what it might achieve. And we also examine the powerful role of the UN Security Council. Many believe it no longer reflects the realities of world power. So, can it be reformed?




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Can we have economic growth without increased resource consumption?

MIT research scientist, Andrew McAfee, argues we need to rethink our assumptions about capitalism and the environment.   Economic growth, he says, has been gradually decoupling from resource consumption. So, if capitalism survives this current crisis, we may need to adapt our understanding of the way it all works.  We also hear from Annmaree O’Keeffe, from the Lowy Institute’s Pacific Islands Program, about the value of Australia’s international public broadcasting effort now that the Pacific is once again an Australian geopolitical focus.




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3D printing to be used in surgery to repair teenager's shattered skull after Cape Byron cliff accident

Fifteen-year-old Connor Meldrum, who was badly injured in a cliff accident, will undergo surgery to have fitted to his skull a custom-printed polyethylene material that mimics the properties of living bone.





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Railton hopes to top topiary with a mountain bike-led revival in Tasmania's north-west

Railton is full of topiary with hedges cleverly clipped into animals, words and objects but there are hopes it can reinvent itself and boost its economy like the north-east town of Derby on the back of newly-opened mountain bike tracks.




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Parachutists forced to jump early after plane engine stopped mid-air, ATSB report finds

Four parachutists were forced to make an emergency jump from a light plane over a popular skydiving region south of Adelaide earlier this year when the engine cut out, according to an Australian Transport Safety Bureau report.




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Call for federal intervention in Tasmanian housing crisis as latest plan fails to impress

A social welfare advocate says without the Federal Government's support, poorer Tasmanians without housing will be "left behind", dismissing the State Government's latest efforts for short-term accommodation solutions.




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Trio arrested after high-speed chase through Adelaide's suburbs in stolen cars, police say

Police arrest three people who allegedly led them on a pursuit in two stolen cars through several Adelaide suburbs, after road spikes failed to stop the high-speed chase.




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Erica Glynn, Alfreda Glynn and Tanith Glynn-Maloney at Australian premiere of She Who Must Be Loved



  • ABC Local
  • sydney
  • Arts and Entertainment:All:All
  • Arts and Entertainment:Film (Movies):All
  • Arts and Entertainment:Film (Movies):Documentary
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Indigenous Culture
  • Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000

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Dark Mofo art rebuilding bushfire-devastated Huon Valley in Tasmania

Dark Mofo art experience Hrafn: Conversations with Odin sees tourists returning to the fire-ravaged Huon Valley south of Hobart to spend money and boost the local communities.




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Young Gold Coast cricket fan shares love of game, refurbishes gear for kids who need it

Gold Coast junior Riley Parsons shares his love of cricket, by refurbishing old gear to give to kids who need it.






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Myki ticket machines to stop producing unwanted receipts after software upgrade

A software upgrade to more than 500 Myki ticket machines fixes an issue that has baffled Victorians for years and also caused littering problems and security concerns.





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Health Department executives accused by CCC of corruption may leave with $600,000 in payouts

The WA Attorney-General casts doubt on whether more than $600,000 worth of severance payouts, made to former Health Department employees embroiled in a decades-long corruption scandal, will be recovered.





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Record $20 million payout for man who suffered severe brain injuries in car crash

Chrys Barker has been confined to a wheelchair and is in need of 24-hour care since being critically injured in a car accident in 2014. He's now been awarded what is believed to be the biggest single personal injury settlement in Queensland.




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Darwin water park push to continue, even though all applications have been rejected so far

The Northern Territory Chief Minister says plans for a water theme park in Darwin are not dead in the water yet, despite his Government formally rejecting all expressions of interest in the project submitted so far.




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Sex workers say they are being 'harassed' by SA Police as decriminalisation debate continues

Sex workers say they are being harassed and intimidated by South Australian police, as figures show charges for sex-work offences have spiked in the past two years.



  • ABC Local
  • adelaide
  • Community and Society:Prostitution:All
  • Community and Society:Sexuality:All
  • Government and Politics:All:All
  • Government and Politics:Parliament:State Parliament
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:All:All
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:Crime:All
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:Police:All
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:Sexual Offences:All
  • Australia:SA:Adelaide 5000
  • Australia:SA:All

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Midvale home firebombed after woman set alight, with man charged after taken to hospital

A Perth woman sustains burns to 30 per cent of her body and is taken to hospital in a critical condition after a man allegedly set her alight and then threw a firebomb into a house in Perth's east overnight.




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Opposition Leader Liza Harvey attacked by Chamber of Commerce over Liberal policies

WA's Chamber of Commerce and Industry releases a damning assessment of newly-elected Opposition Leader Liza Harvey's economic policies, saying they put the state's budget repair at risk.





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Shirley Finn murder to remain unsolved as inquest closed and police warned

Coroner Barry King warns police of probable adverse findings against them for their incompetence during the initial investigation into the 1975 killing of Perth brothel madam Shirley Finn, as he closes an inquest into her murder which he says will likely remain unsolved.




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CFMEU Victoria branch threatens to cut financial support to ALP if John Setka is expelled

The Victorian branch of the CFMEU threatens to immediately cease all financial support for the ALP if Labor leader Anthony Albanese's push to expel union leader John Setka goes ahead.




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Victoria Police Assistant Commissioner Chris O'Neill bashed at Toorak's Heyington train station

Police charge two brothers, aged 18 and 20, over an unprovoked attack on an off-duty senior Victorian police officer near a Melbourne train station.




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Questions the AFL must answer before the Behavioural Awareness Officers are unleashed again

The AFL's supporter crackdown is being felt by those in the stands, but without confirmation one way or another from the AFL, the supporters are filling the void with questions of their own.




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Billion-dollar Indigenous-led power station to revive struggling Queensland coal town

A proposed $2 billion Indigenous-led coal-fired power station in Collinsville in North Queensland developed by Brisbane-based Indigenous company Shine Energy and headed by traditional Biri man Ashley Dodd is set to revive one of the country's oldest coal towns.






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Canberra man Eden Waugh murdered in 'cold-blooded plan' to silence him over home invasion, court hears

The 2016 killing of a Canberra man is portrayed as a "cold-blooded plan", designed to silence him over an earlier machete attack, on the first day of an ACT Supreme Court trial.




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Sydney news: State Budget to spend big on education and infrastructure; woman found dead in Zetland

MORNING BRIEFING: Today's State Budget will include funding for extra teachers, health workers and police as well as a public transport boost, while the homicide squad is investigating the death of a woman who was found on a Sydney footpath.



  • ABC Local
  • northcoast
  • sydney
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Missing Person:All
  • Government and Politics:All:All
  • Government and Politics:Housing:All
  • Government and Politics:Parliament:State Parliament
  • Government and Politics:States and Territories:All
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:All:All
  • Law
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  • Science and Technology:All:All
  • Science and Technology:Computers and Technology:All
  • Science and Technology:Computers and Technology:Internet
  • Australia:NSW:Byron Bay 2481
  • Australia:NSW:Mascot 2020
  • Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000

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Man 'tortured, waterboarded and suffocated' over stolen car claims, court hears

The crown alleges Mark Jones waterboarded Bradley Breward with a hand towel, by placing it over his face and pouring water over it, and also put a plastic shopping bag over his head twice for 40 seconds each time.




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Nearly 100 gene variants that put people at risk of cancer identified in new study

People undergoing genetic testing will have more certainty about whether the variants in their genes risk causing cancer or are completely harmless, after a new international study.




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Train and bus ticketing via phones and plastic to be tested in regional Queensland

It's the system they have in London and Chicago, it's being trialled in New York, and soon it will allow people in Cairns, Mackay and Townsville to pay for trains and buses with their credit cards and mobile phones.




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Apiarist calls for chemical Fipronil to be banned after millions of bees die in Southern NSW

A chemical used to control pests in agricultural crops and termites in buildings has been blamed for the death of up to 10 million bees in southern New South Wales.




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Would a coal mine save Kingaroy, or destroy it? Opinion is fiercely divided

"More mines, more jobs, more future," proclaims a mysterious billboard near Kingaroy. But not everyone agrees and the years of "constant fighting" are taking a massive toll.




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Boy kept 'completely naked' in Brisbane watch house for days

An Indigenous boy with an intellectual impairment was stripped naked inside Brisbane's adult maximum-security police watch house after being deemed a suicide risk, documents reveal.




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Hobart news: Housing Minister hopes federal counterpart will erase $157 million debt

MORNING BRIEFING: Housing Minister optimistic debt will be wiped, city demands urgent action on climate emergency and councils increase rates.