Craig Kelly, US subs, a museum’s PR war and the truth about aged care.
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Saturday Mar 16
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This week we mapped the global war against fact-checkers, exclusively revealed the National Anti-Corruption Commission has claimed three convictions, and explained how to spot when a politician is under foreign influence.

Elsewhere we gave you front-row seats to a Clive Palmer press conference and a media debate about artificial intelligence, and took you inside the Australian Museum's PR fight over a single word: Palestine.

Plus the numbers you need to know when it comes to the future of aged care.

We hope you're having a very special weekend.
Gina Rushton Gina Rushton,
Editor
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Threats, lawsuits, smears: How the global war on fact-checkers and misinfo experts came to Australia
CAM WILSON

The public scrutiny of misinformation, disinformation and lies has become politicised to the point of farce — and we're all dumber for it.

(Image: Zennie/Private Media)
 
There’s an easy way to find out which MP is under foreign influence
BERNARD KEANE

One of the better ways to deter foreign spies from recruiting MPs would be to require the latter to publish details of all their meetings.

ASIO Director General Mike Burgess (Image: AAP/Mick Tsikas)
 
Will any of $4.5bn in Oz tax money be used to fund nuclear-armed subs in the US?
ANTON NILSSON

Australia has set aside billions of dollars to fund US submarine building. But the same shipyards and staff building the AUKUS subs are also building nuclear-armed boats.

Virginia-class USS North Carolina docked in Perth in 2023 (Image: AAP/Aaron Bunch)
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Democracy, an abuser’s guide, from the Business Council of Australia
BERNARD KEANE and GLENN DYER

Democracy is preventing economic reform, argues the Business Council, so let's have less of it and allow unelected officials to run things.

BCA president Geoff Culbert (Image: AAP/Bianca De Marchi)
 
How one word sparked a PR wildfire for the Australian Museum
DAANYAL SAEED

Cultural and heritage organisations are under fire from interest groups amid the Israel-Gaza war. Crikey has obtained documents that go inside the Australian Museum's PR crisis.

(Image: Private Media/Zennie)
 
These astounding numbers about aged care explain why we have a taskforce
ANTON NILSSON

Crikey pores over the figures in the new report from the federal government's aged care taskforce.

(Image: Private Media/Zennie)
 
The future of aged care is home care, for better and for worse
BERNARD KEANE

When you think aged care you probably think nursing homes. But home care is increasingly dominating how we care for seniors.

(Image: Adobe)
 
Clive Palmer renews push for Titanic II and a new social media network named ‘Ausface’
ANTON NILSSON

What do you do when you've got more money than you can ever hope to spend? Crikey caught up with one of the few Australians who can answer that question.

Clive Palmer (Image: AAP/Bianca De Marchi)
 
Here’s how to make Facebook really pay for news
BENJAMIN CLARK

The government ought to go beyond the embattled news media bargaining code and contribute more public funding for what should be, at heart, a public good.

Mark Zuckerberg (Image: EPA/Jiji Press)
 
Revealed: Anti-corruption commission claims first three convictions
ANTON NILSSON

EXCLUSIVE: The case of a corrupt ex-ATO employee, concluded earlier this week, was the third time a NACC probe has led to a conviction.

Inaugural NACC commissioner Paul Brereton (Image: AAP/Mick Tsikas)
 
Media bosses clash over AI, News Corp set for pale and stale Olympics, and TikTok’s US ban
DAANYAL SAEED

This week in Media Briefs: News Corp's Olympics coverage looks awfully one-note, and executives go head to head over artificial intelligence.

Matty Johns and Senator James Paterson (Images: AAP/Supplied/Private Media)
 
Help! I’m facing the impossible task of figuring out who to vote for in the Tasmanian election
CRYSTAL ANDREWS

What's a newcomer to do faced with a confusing electoral system and a small, highly concentrated local media presence?

Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff and Labor's opposition leader Rebecca White (Image: AAP/Ethan James)
 
I’m a public school teacher. Here’s why private schools shouldn’t exist
BRENDAN MCDOUGALL

Public schools are being decimated by the private industry, which in Australia has entrenched class segregation and become an aspirational norm.

(Image: Zennie/Private Media)