Australia
Related: About this forumNothing Like Talk Of A War To Silence A Small Target Opposition Leader
Voters dont want the government to dismantle Australias social democracy. The sentiment is apparent in both opinion polls, in the nervous whispers that began to emanate from Coalition backbenchers, and in the ordinary remarks of individual voters.
The Coalitions trust deficit is exacerbated by the fact that it never promised to radically reshape Australias social safety net. Abbotts much ridiculed promises of no cuts to health, education, pensions and the ABC have garnered plenty of coverage since they were broken, but the bigger picture is that by committing to maintaining health and education spending, Abbott appeared to be accepting the social democratic consensus of the Rudd-Gillard years. All that has gone by the wayside.
(snip)
In stark contrast to Abbott as opposition leader, Shorten has not made himself into an attack dog, relentlessly tearing at the governments credibility and performance. Nor has he appointed a suitable colleague to play that role even when, in Anthony Albanese, a rugged street fighter is close to hand.
In fact, you could make a good case that the governments most damaging wounds after a year in office have been self-inflicted.
https://newmatilda.com/2014/09/18/nothing-talk-war-silence-small-target-opposition-leader
After their abysmal performance in NSW, where the Union-dominated Right-wing allowed corruption to flourish to the point where Labor was all but wiped off the map electorally, it's hard to credit they'd keep giving us more of the same federally, where they had a real chance after the divisive Rudd-Gillard years to come up with a viable, electorally popular leader who could fashion a parliamentary party that would wipe the electorally unpopular and inept Tony Abbott off the political map.
Instead, after the grass roots vote showed a clear preference for Antony Albanese to become leader, the union-dominated Caucus came up with Bill Shorten,. the only man in the House of Reps who can match Abbott in the boring stakes.
Devoid of personality, devoid of passion, and seemingly devoid of ideas, he's doing the unthinkable making an Abbott second-term look inevitable.
And yes, here he was today, in lockstep with Abbott, marching Australia off to this phony war, which is almost entirely the product of Howard's equally phony war in 2003.
I despair, I really do.
Fairgo
(1,571 posts)I note that police are now dressing up in paramilitary garb and given new powers to combat the spectral menace. And the promise not to torture people is framed as a significant concession for Labour, as a raft of new laws are hastily redefining our relationship with the world in the context of never ending war.
Manufactured fear draws our attention away from the privatisation of hospitals, destruction of the reef...and all other symptoms of the methodical americanisation of Australia. The real war isn't being fought against terror, its being waged against social democracy everwhere. Isis is just the latest diversion in a system that will churn out an endless stream of trolls and bogeymen, bread and circuses...with less and less bread. It won't stop until it extracts all of the profit from every vulnerable source and establishes a neo feudal state.
This is not politics, as Chris Hedges points out, it's a business cycle.
Matilda
(6,384 posts)And the cops are getting over-excited. Shooting dead an 18 year old this morning in Melbourne, for shouting insults about Tony Abbott? Two armed cops couldn't subdue a kid with a knife? But this is Victoria, where cops are gun-happy anyway, and no questions will be asked. They say one went to shake his hand, and he drew a knife. When was the last time you saw a cop shaking the hand of a suspect?
And we can't look to Bill Shorten to divert attention back to what really matters, I'm afraid. His strings are being pulled by the unions, and they care only about how much power they can wield.
I've donated to the Greens; now I think it might be time to join them.