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Cultural Cringe and ‘The Lost City of Melbourne’

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Cultural Cringe and ‘The Lost City of Melbourne’

The Australia Letter is a weekly publication from our Australia bureau. Join to get it by e-mail.

Guests to New York usually comment that it seems like getting into a movie set. To stroll by way of Central Park is to hint the footsteps of Harry and Sally, Spider-Man or numerous Muppets. Momentary glimpses of the Chrysler Constructing or the New York Public Library work virtually as an establishing shot: That is New York Metropolis, child.

Melbourne has little such on-screen cachet. Its skyline barely sticks within the reminiscence. As an alternative, these architectural elements that linger are on a much smaller scale: the lacy ironwork that fringes cottages and terraced homes; the unusually broad streets of the central metropolis; the impartial cinemas unfold throughout city — the Astor, the Palace, the Solar Theatre — with their grand facades and gently creaking seats.

And whereas folks in New York rejoice its cycles of growth and bust, ask Melburnians about their metropolis’s current historical past and plenty of draw a clean. It barely options at school curriculums, which take a broader method. Even on the municipal museum, the wing devoted to the town’s historical past dwells on its colonial roots, earlier than galloping by way of the final century.

A brand new documentary, “The Misplaced Metropolis of Melbourne,” goes some technique to explaining why the town appears to be like the best way it does. In lower than 90 minutes, the film retraces Melbourne’s architectural historical past, eulogizing among the magnificent Nineteenth-century buildings felled within the title of glass-fronted progress within the Fifties, Nineteen Sixties and early Seventies.

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The movie premiered earlier this 12 months at Melbourne’s Worldwide Movie Competition. Since then, screenings at impartial cinemas throughout the town have usually bought out, as Melburnians rush to be taught extra in regards to the place they name house.

Gus Berger, the film’s director and an impartial cinema proprietor in Thornbury, began the self-funded undertaking in lockdown. “It was actually like exploring one other metropolis,” he instructed me lately. “Despite the fact that I do know Melbourne so nicely and I’ve lived right here all my life, it was similar to exploring a type of secret metropolis, if you happen to like — a metropolis that I wasn’t conversant in.”

Whereas the film seeks to rejoice what Melbourne nonetheless has, it additionally mourns the “cultural cringe” — a well-known phrase coined by the Australian critic A. A. Phillips in 1950 — that led builders and planners to raze among the metropolis’s most splendid Victorian buildings.

“We determined we had been too old school and too Victorian for the world’s gaze, as we approached the Olympic Video games and the queen’s go to,” stated Mr. Berger, referring to occasions that came about in 1956 and 1954. “Everybody appeared to be shifting ahead and modernizing, and I believe that Melburnians simply felt that they weren’t, and so they didn’t wish to be left behind.”

Watching the film, I used to be reminded of “Hovering,” a current novel by the Australian author Rhett Davis in regards to the metropolis of Fraser, a Melbourne analog. A personality describes her onetime desperation to flee this “proverbial outpost”: “It was nothing, this metropolis. It was no New York, or London, or Hong Kong, or Rome. No little one puzzled the place it was on this planet, imagined what it will be prefer to go there.”

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Do Melburnians nonetheless really feel like this? Principally not, however perhaps a little bit. “Cultural cringe” isn’t so overbearing, no less than, {that a} wrecking ball threatens the town’s most iconic websites — however it additionally explains why Mr. Berger and his audiences have needed to go to such lengths to find out about what got here earlier than.

And although viewers, by and enormous, have cherished the movie, the anxiousness at its heart — is Melbourne sufficient for the world? — filters by way of to its reception. “I’m not positive how this documentary would resonate with non-Melburnians,” one reviewer frets. One other questions whether or not the movie can have “issues reaching an viewers that isn’t invested within the metropolis.”

The residents of Eighties Melbourne would have had no such qualms. A London journalist, visiting in 1885, referred to as it “Marvelous Melbourne,” writing: “The entire metropolis, in brief, teems with wealth, even because it does with humanity.” It was wealthy and exquisite, and migrants had been drawn by the promise of a land growth, which led to land in some elements of the town being as worthwhile as that of London. Over the course of the last decade, the inhabitants virtually doubled, from 280,000 folks in 1880 to 490,000 in 1890.

“The Misplaced Metropolis of Melbourne” goes some technique to recapturing that civic satisfaction. It’s spellbinding, heartfelt and deeply, proudly native, however it additionally makes a compelling case that the world’s eyes must be skilled on this pearl of a city, because it was and as it’s.

Listed here are the week’s tales.

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Giuliani is disbarred in New York as court finds he repeatedly lied about Trump's 2020 election loss

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Giuliani is disbarred in New York as court finds he repeatedly lied about Trump's 2020 election loss

NEW YORK (AP) — Rudolph Giuliani, the former New York City mayor, federal prosecutor and legal adviser to Donald Trump, was disbarred in the state on Tuesday after a court found he repeatedly made false statements about Trump’s 2020 election loss.

A New York appeals court in Manhattan ruled that Giuliani, who had already had his New York law license suspended in 2021 for false statements he made after the election, is now “disbarred from the practice of law, effective immediately, and until the further order of this Court, and his name stricken from the roll of attorneys and counselors-at-law in the State of New York.”

Giuliani’s attorney Arthur Aidala said they were “obviously disappointed” but not surprised by the decision. He said they “put up a valiant effort” to prevent the disbarment but “saw the writing on the wall.”

The court said in its decision that Giuliani “essentially conceded” most of the facts supporting the alleged acts of misconduct during hearings held in October 2023. Instead, the decision said, he argued that he “lacked knowledge that statements he had made were false and that he had a good faith basis to believe the allegations he made to support his claim that the 2020 Presidential election was stolen from his client.”

The court said it found that Giuliani “falsely and dishonestly” claimed during the 2020 Presidential election that thousands of votes were cast in the names of dead people in Philadelphia, including a ballot in the name of the late boxing great Joe Frazier. He also falsely claimed people were taken from nearby Camden, New Jersey, to vote illegally in the Pennsylvania city, the court said.

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The order states that Giuliani must “desist and refrain from practicing law in any form,” including “giving to another an opinion as to the law or its application or any advice” or “holding himself out in any way as an attorney and counselor-at-law.”

Before pleading Trump’s case in November 2020, Giuliani had not appeared in court as an attorney since 1992, according to court records.

The disbarment comes amid mounting woes for Giuliani, who filed for bankruptcy last year after he was ordered to pay $148 million in damages to two former Georgia election workers over lies he spread about them that upended their lives with racist threats and harassment.

Giuliani is also facing criminal charges in Georgia and Arizona over his role in the effort to overturn the 2020 election. He has pleaded not guilty in both cases.

He’s charged in Georgia with making false statements and soliciting false testimony, conspiring to create phony paperwork and asking state lawmakers to violate their oath of office to appoint an alternate slate of pro-Trump electors.

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The Arizona indictment accuses Giuliani of pressuring Maricopa County officials and state legislators to change the outcome of Arizona’s results and encouraging Republican electors in the state to vote for Trump in December 2020.

Giuliani built his public persona by practicing law, as the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan in the 1980s, when he went after mobsters, powerbrokers and others. The law-and-order reputation helped catapult him into politics, governing the United States’ most populous city when it was beset by high crime.

His leadership of the stricken city after the Sept. 11 terror attacks in 2001 earned him the image of “America’s mayor.” The Republican was lauded for holding the city together after two hijacked planes slammed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, killing more than 2,700 people.

But after unsuccessful runs for the U.S. Senate and the presidency, and a lucrative career as a globetrotting consultant, Giuliani smashed his image as a centrist who could get along with Democrats as he became one of Trump’s most loyal defenders.

He was the primary mouthpiece for Trump’s false claims of election fraud after the 2020 vote, infamously standing at a press conference in front of Four Seasons Total Landscaping outside Philadelphia on the day the race was called for Democrat Joe Biden over the Republican Trump and saying they would challenge what he claimed was a vast conspiracy by Democrats.

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Lies around the election results helped push an angry mob of pro-Trump rioters to storm the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in an effort to stop the certification of Biden’s victory.

In May, WABC radio suspended Giuliani and canceled his daily talk show because he refused to stop making false claims about the 2020 election.

___

Associated Press reporters Karen Matthews and Jennifer Peltz in New York, Michael Sisak in Fort Pierce, Fla., and Alanna Durkin Richer in Washington contributed to this story.

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Iran vows to back Hezbollah in fight with Israel as IRGC general renews threat of imminent missile strike

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Iran vows to back Hezbollah in fight with Israel as IRGC general renews threat of imminent missile strike

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Iran vowed on Tuesday to back the terrorist organization Hezbollah “by all means” against Israel if Jerusalem launches an offensive in neighboring Lebanon.

Kamal Kharrazi, Iranian foreign minister and top advisor to Iran’s supreme leader, issued a stark warning that a conflict in Lebanon could result in a regional war involving all Arab nations. 

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“All Lebanese people, Arab countries and members of the Axis of Resistance will support Lebanon against Israel,” he said in an interview with the Financial Times. “There would be a chance of expansion of the war to the whole region, in which all countries including Iran would become engaged.”

“In that situation, we would have no choice, but to support Hezbollah by all means,” he added. 

A split screen showing Hamas terrorists, left, and Hezbollah Radwan forces, right. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images | AP/Hassan Ammar)

US CITIZENS SUE STATE SPONSORS OF TERRORISM, IRAN, SYRIA AND NORTH KOREA, FOR AIDING HAMAS MASS MURDER

Kharrazi noted that “the expansion of war is not in the interest of anyone – not Iran or the U.S.,” but his comments came just one day after a top Iranian commander said he was itching for the opportunity to levy more strikes against Israel.

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Speaking to the families of Palestinians killed during the fight in the Gaza Strip on Monday, Brigadier General of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Aerospace Force Amir Ali Hajizadeh said he is “hopeful” another strike will be carried out against Jerusalem following the first attack in April.

Iran Foreign Minister

Kamal Kharrazi, then foreign minister of Iran, waits to speak at the United Nations May 3, 2005 in New York City. (Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

“We are hopeful of the arrival of the opportunity for [conducting] Operation True Promise 2,” Hajizadeh said, according to Iranian-owned media outlet Mehr News Agency.

The comments were in reference to the more than 300 drones, ballistic missiles and cruise missiles Tehran reportedly fired at Israel on April 14, the majority of which were stopped by Israeli and U.S. forces.

Commander of Aerospace Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Amir Ali Hajizadeh gives a speech as Iran presents its first hypersonic ballistic missile "Fattah" (Conqueror) at an event in Tehran, Iran, on June 6, 2023.

Commander of Aerospace Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Amir Ali Hajizadeh gives a speech as Iran presents its first hypersonic ballistic missile “Fattah” (Conqueror) at an event in Tehran, Iran, on June 6, 2023. (Sepah News / Handout/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

The strike marked the first time Iran directly attacked Israel despite years of proxy fighting and apparent covert hits on top military targets. 

ISRAEL DESTROYS ISLAMIC JIHAD’S LARGEST ROCKET PRODUCTION SITE IN GAZA

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Hajizadeh, who has played a critical role in developing Iran’s drone and missile program, did not say what the next attack against Jerusalem would look like but promised to continue supporting terrorists in the ongoing war against Israel. 

“As it is obvious from the weapons of our dear ones in Palestine, Lebanon and elsewhere, it has now become clear that they are in fact being helped and supplied by Iran,” he said, according to Iran’s Tasnim News Agency.

An arch glorifying Hezbollah and baring pictures of its chief Hassan Nasrallah, right, and Iran's spiritual leader Ali Khamenei decorates a street of Beirut's southern suburb on Jan. 16, 2011.

An arch glorifying Hezbollah and baring pictures of its chief Hassan Nasrallah, right, and Iran’s spiritual leader Ali Khamenei decorates a street of Beirut’s southern suburb on Jan. 16, 2011. ( Photo: ANWAR AMRO/AFP via Getty Images)

Tehran’s involvement in Jerusalem’s fight in the Gaza Strip has increasingly drawn international concern. Iran expert and senior fellow with The Foundation for Defense of Democracies Behnam Ben Taleblu said the strike in April “means that never again can the threat of a direct attack by the Islamic Republic against Israel be ignored.”

“That large a volley of cruise missiles, ballistic missiles and drones was designed to kill just as much as it was designed to send a message,” he added.

Israeli airstrike in Gaza Strip

Smoke and flames rise following an Israeli airstrike in the Gaza Strip, Gaza, on Nov. 2, 2023. (Photo by Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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The Hajizadeh’s comments came just days after Iran’s mission to the United Nations also threatened an “obliterating war” against Israel if it launched an offensive in Lebanon against Hezbollah – a scenario Taleblu said Iran is using to exacerbate a “cycle of violence against Israel.”

“We are in the incubation phase of greater militia coordination. As Hamas fights Israel, Hezbollah is drawing resources from the south toward the north, while proxies in Yemen and Iraq are trying to synchronize their fire against the Jewish state,” he warned. “In the interim, Tehran is benefiting from the chaos.”

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Rule of law protests greet new Dutch government at swearing-in

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Rule of law protests greet new Dutch government at swearing-in

A group of protesters watched from behind the fences at Huis ten Bosch Palace as a new Dutch cabinet was sworn in.

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Around 20 Amnesty International activists participated in a demonstration in The Hague out of concern for the rule of law. 

Dutch democracy is in danger, those gathered Tuesday morning said as the new Dutch government was being sworn in.

“Parties will soon enter the government, one of which does not even have members [PVV],” said one demonstrator, “Parties that sow hatred and exclude large groups of people in society.” 

“We shouldn’t normalise that. It is not normal. We are speaking out, and we will continue to speak out.” 

The group had awaited new Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof, along with incoming ministers and state secretaries, at the back entrance of the palace. However, the politicians arrived at the front entrance instead, so the group missed them. 

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The protestors failed to interrupt the government’s family photo, which started ten minutes earlier than planned, meaning they arrived just too late.  

Schoof, the former head of the Dutch intelligence agency and counterterrorism office, signed an official royal decree on Tuesday to uphold his duties as the country’s prime minister. 

The 67-year-old was installed alongside 15 other ministers who make up the country’s right-leaning coalition. 

The four parties in the coalition are Geert Wilders’ Party for Freedom (PVV), outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s centre-right People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy, the populist Farmer Citizen Movement and the centrist New Social Contract party. 

Wilders’ far-right anti-immigration PVV party had won the largest share of seats in the Netherlands’ elections last November. However, it took Wilders 223 days to find enough allies to form a government. 

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