You have one life. Find something you love to do and do it until the day you die. If you find a job that feels like play, you'll never have to work a day in your life.
If you are viewing this on a mobile, the newsletter and many of the links should work better in a horizontal format.
If you've ever worried about money, read the Burning $100 Bills section. It could help you sleep easier at night.
Restricted content. Articles marked * or ** are on restricted websites Click for more info, including how you can sometimes avoid the paywalls.
.In this issue
You have one life. Find something you love to do and do it until the day you die. If you find a job that feels like play, you'll never have to work a day in your life.
My life has been blessed. I am one of the few people I know who have succeeded in doing the above. Another is a friend named Jack Joyce who I met while travelling in Europe in 1970. Jack loved travel and he loved maps. Eventually, along with a friend of his, he founded International Travel Maps. (Their map of Namibia was the best single map I found for my recent visit.) If you're curious, you can read Jack's story here.
If you're curious about me, see the History page on our website. It links to three magazine articles that have been written about me.
That's two people.
And what about your friends and family? Here are a few articles that may help you get closer to where you'd like to be.
I think it's giving and, in some cases, even a few dollars can make a difference. One of those cases is the Carolyn Lister Memorial Scholarship which supports female students in a remote part of PNG to train to become Community Health Workers. In early November, I had the privilege of attending a function where I learned more about it, almost to the point where I felt as if I knew some of the recipients.
PNG is our nearest neighbour. They need our help. Every dollar donated to a cause like this will have a far larger impact than ten dollars donated to a large organisation which has large administration expenses. If you'd like to know more about it, click the link in the paragraph above. If you'd like to donate, click here.
Would you deliberately burn a pile of $100 banknotes as shown? If you have credit card debt that rolls over month after month, that's exactly what you are doing. The average credit card balance which is being charged interest every month is $1375. At the average credit card interest rate of 17.92% (which will rise if the RBA raises the interest rate again), the average credit card holder is paying almost $250 in interest per year. That's an average. Some people are wasting thousands of dollars every year. If you'd like a detailed picture of credit card debt in Australia, have a look at Credit Card Debt Statistics 2023.
There is a better way.
Most personal finance literature is focused on getting people the most money and therefore doing things that increase their stress. It causes them to think about money all the time. People shouldn't be thinking about money all the time. Instead, they should aspire to not think about it at all.
In previous newsletters, I've referred to Jared Dillian Money, a free newsletter, most of the content of which is as applicable in Australia as it is in the US where Jared is based. He has now written a book which will come out in January. It's called No Worries: How to live a stress-free financial life. Even some billionaires stress about money. Unless you are incredibly poor, stress is not necessary. I try not to waste my money, but I generally don't stress about it either.
The link above will take you to a page with links to different providers. Amazon will ship to Australia and has a Kindle version. Click the international link to go to Booktopia for a hard copy in Australia. I think the link to this book is one of the best Christmas presents I can give my readers, so to give you an incentive to click, here's what Amazon and Booktopia both say about the book.
$1200 Discount
Our two major wet season expeditions are both definite departures and small groups. We'd like to share these experiences with more people so we've taken $1200 off the list price of each of them.
Park managers seem to be getting more risk averse every year. We don't know how long we'll be able to keep offering these trips. Get in now if you want to be sure of a visit.
In February 1984, before I registered the "Willis's Walkabouts" business name, I took my first paying customers into the Top End Wet. Most of the places we visited on those trips are no longer accessible. Some are. To celebrate the anniversary, I created the Russell's 40th Anniversary Wet Season Special: 4-25 Feb.
This trip consists of the things I most want to do myself. It's divided into three sections, any of which can be done on its own.
Everyone had such a good time on our 2023 trip to Namibia that I decided to run another one in 2024, this time with more multi-day walks. (There will be other options for those who don't want to do all the longer walks.) Amazingly, I got the first booking before I finalised the itinerary. Amazing, but necessary. Many of the walks we want to include book out early. Booking requires paying a deposit. I can't make those bookings until I have people booked.
If you'd like a taste of what the 2023 trip was like, please have a look at our Facebook page where I've been posting a variety of photos from this year's trip. More will follow.
How long can WW survive? We can't run a trip unless we have bookings well in advance. Many of our guides have other jobs and need to organise time off. That's why we offer such good advance purchase discounts. With the exception of a few special trips, people are tending to book later. In some cases that means we've cancelled a trip before we get a booking. We've already had to cancel the January 2024 Kakadu Highlights No. 1. Others will follow unless bookings start coming in soon. There are three more trips I'd like to mention.
Teens Don't Really Understand That the World Can See What They Do Online, but I Do *
What you post may be there for as long as there is an internet.
"Famous or not, teenagers today have never known a world without social media, so it's easy to assume they just understand all the risks that come with making their personal lives public. But even for the most digitally savvy among us, it can be hard to conceptualize just what global visibility really means. This is especially true of teenagers, who are prone to risky behavior and bad judgment, and who are ill equipped to assess the potential impact of their actions. At a time when sites like TikTok have become the de facto way teenagers connect with friends, they're much more likely to post a stray thought or embarrassing admission (or worse) with no consideration that it might end up capturing the attention of the world."
If you have teenagers or younger, or grandchildren who are teenagers of under, definitely a must read.
AI is here to stay. It will transform our society in ways we can barely imagine.
AI fake nudes are booming. It's ruining real teens' lives. **
Artificial intelligence makes it frighteningly easy to transform ordinary pictures into realistic nudes, triggering a surge of fake images of women and teens
I forgot to mark this article when I first saw it. When I tried searching, I found lots of sites offering to help you generate nude photos of real people. The genie is out of the bottle. I don't think it can be put back. It's only a matter of time before almost everyone has nude versions of themselves circulating on the web. My guess is that people will simply have to give up and accept it. it will take years, maybe decades, but it will happen. (Times change. Think of the nudity on Australian TV back in the 1970s; at some point, it will return.)
As an aside, I wonder if we're going to be seeing AI generated versions of nude American politicians in the coming election. If it happens, their reaction will win or lose them votes. Interesting thought. And interesting to wonder what it will be like in ten years time.
How many recognised the reference in the heading. Brave New World
"In 1999, the Modern Library ranked Brave New World at number 5 on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century. In 2003, Robert McCrum, writing for The Observer, included Brave New World chronologically at number 53 in "the top 100 greatest novels of all time", and the novel was listed at number 87 on The Big Read survey by the BBC. Brave New World has frequently been banned and challenged since its original publication. It has landed on the American Library Association list of top 100 banned and challenged books of the decade since the association began the list in 1990.
The West is facing many challenges. So is China.
China Joins the Chaos
It's very short, but well worth the read. It's another one from Geopolitical Futures. If you want to make sense of the world in a way that you can never do with the mainstream press, it's worth joining up. Click the link and see what specials are on offer.
The NT has a small, independent news service called the NT Independent. Our current chief minister has continued the ban instigated by her predecessor which prevents the NT Independent from attending any government press conference. That kind of ban should be illegal. That on its own should be reason enough for voting for someone else. (Having said that, I think the NT desperately needs the equivalent of the Teals in some southern electorates. I don't have much time for either of our major parties.)
It's so bad that three years ago, the Senate unanimously passes motion calling on NT Government to reverse ban on media publication. Nothing has changed. What do they have to hide?
For what it's worth, the NT Independent won the NT Media Award for best crime reporting earlier this year. (Scroll down to the winners). Go through the other links and you'll see that they won the 2022 award for best news coverage. They may not be completely unbiased (what news source is) but they are a reputable news organisation. Banning them from press conferences is the first step in a slide toward the end of our democratic system.
When things like this are allowed to happen, it's only a matter of time before our society collapses.
When a traffic controller is paid more than a teacher or nurse **
"Labour costs are a major contributor to the cost blowouts of the Victorian government's so-called 'Big Build' infrastructure projects. The abolition of the Australian Building & Construction Commission has allowed unions to dominate the construction industry and dictate the terms and conditions for the enterprise agreements of subcontractors. This has resulted in traffic controllers ― the people who hold slow and stop signs at building sites ― being paid $126,200 a year; the job requires only a two-day training course. In contrast, the starting salary for a registered nurse in Victorian public hospitals is $72,000 and that of a state school teacher is $78,000; both roles require tertiary qualifications.
As long as things like this are true, I don't see any long term hope for this country.
I know someone who recently drove an electric vehicle from Darwin to Brisbane and someone else who drove one from Darwin to Perth. They both got stuck with one very slow charge but otherwise managed fine. It's early days for EVs in Australia. It won't be long before it's easy.
As Stick Shifts Fade Into Obscurity, Collectors See Opportunity *
Cars with manual transmissions, even late models, are holding their value as the collector market hunts for rarity.
All our WW cars are all manual. We need clients who can drive them. Most still can but an increasing number can't drive a manual transmission.
ANYTHING ― even sleeping― is better for your heart than this activity that we all do every day.
Just when you thought nothing could go wrong ....
Four short videos.
Just before I was ready to send this, I got a notice about a special Water Wars Webinar, Tuesday 5th December 2023
12:30PM - 1:30PM Darwin
2:00PM - 3:00PM Sydney
This is an issue dear to my heart. Science be damned! I think this is one of the most disastrous examples of the 'develop at any cost' mentalities I've seen. It has the potential to be incredibly destructive. Here's some background.
The webinar is now over. Click here to see the recording.
Restricted websites. The NY Times allows non-subscribers to look at ten free articles each month. I've got more links than that in this newsletter so I've marked them with a red asterisk (*) so that you can choose which are of most interest to you. Bloomberg allows three free articles. The Washington Post and The Economist both have limits but I'm not sure what the current limits are so I've marked their articles with a double red asterisk (**).
How to Get Past a Paywall to Read an Article for Free
Even if you regularly support journalism by paying, sometimes you need to get around it.
Coming Next Issue
• Water? How much longer can we take it for granted?
• Younger generations? They will make the decisions that affect the end of our lives.
• Death of Democracy. Democracy is under threat around the world.
• Not sure what else. It will be a surprise to me as well as you.
• When? Hopefully January
As always, I welcome a bit of feedback about some of the things in this newsletter and suggestions for the next one.
Sending the newsletter
I'm now using a paid version of MailChimp to send all of the newsletters. I'm now sending this to just over 2200 people; not sure what I'll need to do if the list goes over 2500.
walkabout@bushwalkingholidays.com.au is the contact address on our website. If you would like to continue to receive these newsletters, please include this address in your "friends list" so that it isn't blocked.
Emails sent to walkabout@bushwalkingholidays.com.au are currently automatically forwarded to rrwillis at internode.on.net. If you want to send an email to that address, replace the word "at" with the symbol @. I am trying not to put that address any place where it can be harvested by spam bots.
We don't want to add to the mass of email spam. If you don't want our newsletter, please send us an email and let us know. We'll then delete your name from our newsletter list.
Our email address is walkabout@bushwalkingholidays.com.au.
Note. Both MailChimp and the other program we use to send some of these newsletters have an automatic delete at the bottom. Clicking that link will delete you from the mailing list on the server but it will not delete you from our main database. One of the programs will not allow the auto delete to send me an email notifying me that a deletion has been made. If you want to be sure that you are removed from all further mailings, please send an email to walkabout@bushwalkingholidays.com.au
If you know someone you think would enjoy this newsletter, please forward it to them. The more people who get it, the more likely it is that I'll be able to run the trips which might interest you.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, to you all!!
Russell Willis