Monday, 14 June 2021

Raising funds

Until this month, the Australian Political Reform Club did not present any information directly to the Australian public.

However, the political situation has now changed for the worse.

The urgency of political reform in Australia is now dire.

Every Australian citizen therefore has an immediate and ongoing duty to contribute to the political reform process, whether financially or otherwise.

Running a club, such as this one, regularly involves running out of money.

Whether paying for the design of an expensive logo or paying for running shoes exclusively designed for members determined to run for high office, the Australian Political Reform Club has many short-term and long-term costs to meet, even when its members do not have many prospective members to assess.

Prospective members obviously receive priority assessment when they can demonstrate inexpensive yet elegant tastes, good manners and legal access to unusually large funds of liquid assets surplus to their personal requirements.  

If prospective members have a propensity to protest with logo-carrying placards in front of photojournalists, they will be expected to pay their own legal fees, regardless of the opinions of the Federal Court on such matters.

As the Australian Political Reform Club does not trade anything with non-members, including insults, the club is mainly a consumer of products and services, not a provider.  That is why the club has so many expenses to meet and a regular shortfall of revenue.

Each member is required to cover all expenses associated with personal membership.

There are certainly no group memberships or corporate memberships or family memberships associated with the Australian Political Reform Club.

Assessing individual persons as prospective members is so much easier to achieve than assessing all their social connections, with or without surreptitious assistance from the Australian Federal Police.

All prospective members of the Australian Political Reform Club, and all current members of the club, are expected to be in good standing with the Australian Taxation Office and the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation.

An exception is made with regards to the latter for any prospective members currently practicing the profession of journalism in Australia.

Legal fees and legal threats are often expensive, in any part of the world, hence any suitably qualified legal practitioners with relevant experience, and an eagerness to act on a pro bono basis on behalf of the club, are encouraged to apply for membership as soon as possible.

The same applies for any suitably qualified psychologists and psychiatrists willing to offer pro bono therapeutic services to members threatened by corporate and non-corporate bullies.

Raising funds is only necessary when expenses arise.  The costs of quality accountancy can often be especially difficult to meet, hence any suitably qualified persons seeking to provide the Australian Political Reform Club with financial assistance of any suitable sort, in a pro bono capacity, is encouraged to apply for membership.

Keeping out charlatans is an especially expensive activity, whether in a club or in a country or in a parliament.

That is why members of parody political parties, including those registered with the Australian Electoral Commission, especially those current in possession of far too many seats in parliaments, will not be permitted to join the Australian Political Reform Club.

If you have considerable, highly ethical fundraising experience, and you are currently eligible to become a member of the Australian Political Reform Club, please ensure you provide evidence of your fundraising abilities in cash and kind at your earliest opportunity.


Additional information of quality

Relevant Federal Court decision

Saturday, 12 June 2021

Pitting reformers against charlatans

Are you politically astute? 

Can you prove you are not a charlatan?

Do you regard safe seats in legislatures to be much the same as those associated with pocket boroughs?

Do you regard marginal seats to be much the same as seats associated with rotten boroughs in terms of political corruption?

Are you willing to spend a considerable amount of money towards the reform of Australian politics, especially if that money happens to be your own?

Are you willing to acknowledge that there are many wealthy and not-so-wealthy charlatans preventing political reforms from occurring in Australia?

Have you ever been a member of a reform club elsewhere?

The Australian Political Reform Club has been in existence for many years now.  Most prospective members have been blackballed.  They have not proved themselves worthy of membership, for a wide variety of reasons.

The exclusivity of the club is necessary, for a wide variety of reasons.  The most important reason, of course, is to prevent charlatans and other infiltrators from taking over the club premises.

Real estate in Australia has always been a highly political topic. 

Attempts to reform politics in Australia began in 1788, with efforts by the Eora people to oust the European invaders.

When the selected strategy failed, no potentially effective new strategy was identified.

The people dispossessed of their New Holland homelands have since been forced to intermingle with the dispossessed from many other parts of the world, along with a rabble of excessively wealthy charlatans and an assortment of overly ambitious bullies.


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