Important Events
Hockey says “at the end of the day.”
Joe Hockey In the US, including Congress and the White House, he adds, “at the end of the day there is still strong support for Orcas.” However, he said Australia needs to utilize what is on the negotiation table and engage “deeply.” Donald Trump. He said to RN's breakfast:
That means we need to be vigilant before. I continue to propose to the Australian government in a variety of ways that the Trump administration cannot be ignored. You need to be deeply involved in it. …
Ultimately, it is really important that when the Prime Minister and the President meet next week, we have a detailed discussion not just in aukus. But the same goes for broader trade relations. President Trump is a deal. See, all politicians are deals. The thing is, Donald Trump is obvious about it.
And we have something to trade: aukus.
good morning, Nick Visser To take over for adults here Martin Farrar. I will be your guide through the news of the day.
Joe Hockey says it's a major review of Orcas' skeptical Pentagon
Former ambassador for US Joe Hockey said the Aux pentagon review, released this morning, announced to ABC that it was offensive.
But he said there is still strong support for the US Congress and the White House aukus.
“President Trump is a deal,” Hockey said. “And we have something to trade in Orcas.”
He points out that Australia has already made a large down payment to the US to boost submarine production, and that Australian companies are helping to build US submarines.
However, Australia “has no choice left” if they do not receive Virginia-class submarines from the US under the Aux.
More details on Aukus review:
In today's Grogonomics column, Greg Jericho offers a passionate plea that workers' attempts to change their retirement pension concessions are merely the beginning of a coordinated effort to reduce wealth inequality.
Jericho argues that the wealthy people opposed change is because they are worried about the remaining population realizing that the system is equipped.
Read his entire article here and of course the graph:

Daisy Dumas
Annecto, age group and disability care provider, will be closed
Care providers for the elderly and disability Annect It will close next month and will take over 1,000 workers and service jobs to more than 3,000 customers.
The company said in a statement yesterday that the July closure would affect all support for Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and the veterans of the act, as well as seniors and disabled people.
The provider said it had been running for more than 70 years, and the decision to close has been made after “careful deliberations and extensive stakeholder consultations taking into account the changing service models for the elderly care and disability sector and the financial challenges facing the organization.”
Annect said it is working with the Department of Health's Disability and Aging Department, the National Disability Insurance Department and the Veterans Affairs Department to move customers and staff to other healthcare providers.
“The decision was not made lightly,” Annect Chair's Colleen Fanlett said.
“We are deeply grateful for all these years of community support and the dedication of our staff and partners to our quality support standards.”
The possibilities of AI are immeasurable, but employment can be expensive, says the productivity chief

Daisy Dumas
Australia's productivity committee said that while the opportunity for artificial intelligence is “immeasurable”, it will lead to some unemployment.
Talked to ABC's 7.30 last night, Daniel Wood The prediction by the US AI company chief executive that technology could wipe out half of the entry-level white-collar work within five years was “pretty extraordinary” and “a bang against other reasonable forecasts” she saw.
Instead, she said that more routine elements of the job will be carried over to AI.
“Are I going to sit here and say, 'Are you not going to work?' “No, there's obviously some impact,” she said.
“There are huge opportunities. I think we need to remember that… I know a lot of people who use it in their work now, and I can see how they are freeing up some of the less-than-good parts of their work.”
Josh Butler I spoke Tim Ayers On this very issue, today's talk states that we can “become a lot” from embracing AI, particularly highlighting the potential boost to productivity and economic growth.
Growing up on a cattle farm near Lismore, Ayers said both white-collar and traditional blue-collar jobs can benefit from automation and new technology.
Read the full story here:
welcome
good morning. Welcome to the live news blog. I Martin Farrar In one night story, and that Nick Visser To spend the day.
New Industry and Science Minister Tim Ayers warns today that Australia is either “leaning hard” towards the benefits of artificial intelligence or taking risks “at the end of someone else's supply chain.” His comments followed an appearance by the Australian Productivity Commissioner last night at 7.30, saying AI would cost money to hire. It's getting closer.
We'll be bringing you the news of a large care provider that will close next month.
And Tasmanian parties are preparing for another election campaign today after the state governor said they had no choice but to call for a poll to resolve the political crisis on Ringo Island. There's the latest one.
