The School of Athens

The School of Athens
The School of Athens by Raphael (click on picture to view short documentary from Columbia University)

Friday 24 June 2011

The lesser of two evils

Colleagues and scholars from coast to coast, across Bass Strait and all the ships at sea.

Dateline: Australia, Federal Politics 2011.

There's nothing surprising in the opinion polls at the moment, and I see no reason for there to be any substantial change for quite some time.  

The current situation is almost exclusively to do with the climate change/carbon tax "debate" and the electorate's trust, or lack thereof, of the two leaders of the major political parties.

First, the policy positions and political discourse of the ALP and Coalition on climate change have been totally bereft of integrity.

In 2007 the ALP had a position of taking action, then in 2010 deferred taking action, then in 2011 re-embraced taking action (although what constitutes that action is yet to be determined).

In 2007 the Coalition had a position of taking no action, then later in 2007 adopted a position of taking action, then in 2009 abandoned that position in favour of a position of taking "direct action".

Second, we have two leaders, Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott, who are not trusted by the electorate.

Gillard, for her announcement before the 2010 election that "There will be no carbon tax under the Government I lead", and then proposing to introduce one following the election without any adequate explanation as to why, or, if she felt her intention prior to the election was distorted or misrepresented, an adequate explanation to the public as to how that might have occurred.

Abbott, whose trustworthiness voters have always questioned, compounded the electorate's suspicion of him with his "I'm a weather vane on climate change" multiple positions, and his "Gospel truth" interview with Kerry O'Brien.

Gillard is now saying to the electorate "I'm going to make a change that's in your best interests", but because she has not yet provided any information as to how this change will work, she is effectively asking them to take her on trust - a commodity she does not have to trade.  Worse, she is asking them to trust her on the one item she said she would not introduce (as discussed above).

Abbott, on the other hand, is saying to the electorate "I'm not going to make any change".

In those circumstances, when you are faced with two people you do not trust, the one saying they are not going to change anything is more likely to win.  It's the least risky proposition for the voter.

Yes, the Coalition does have a "direct action" policy on climate change, but I suspect the electorate feels - those who are aware of it - that it is mere window-dressing.  Generally most would feel the Coalition is not going to do much at all, certainly while Abbott is leader.

Until the Government releases its policy then nothing much will change in the minds of the voters.  The Coalition will be "winning" the climate change "debate".

However, when the Government releases its policy and then legislates it, the circumstances might well be different and change quite dramatically.

Assuming the Government legislates its policy to commence from July 2012, then by the time of the next election (say August - October 2013) it will have been in place for over one year.  

Then it will be Gillard who will be saying to the electorate "I'm not going to make any change", and Abbott who will be saying "I am going to make a change that's in your best interests."

On that basis, when you are faced with two people you do not trust, the one saying they are not going to change anything is more likely to win.

Now there is a key assumption here, that the implementation of the policy will run relatively smoothly and that there are not "thousands of people thrown out of work" as a result.  

But if that occurs, then the Coalition will have a difficult time explaining why they are going to rescind something that is working well enough, and also why their predictions of mass unemployment did not eventuate.  Additionally, they will have to remove all the compensation that the public had been accustomed to receiving for over one year (assuming they don't decide to keep making the compensation payments and pay for it out of the budget).

In those circumstances, it will be Gillard who will claim to be vindicated and will be able to improve her credibility with the voters, at least from the basement to the underground car-park, and it will be Abbott who will lose further credibility sinking from the basement into the storm water drainage system.

There is also another potential problem looming for the Coalition, and that is that its climate change policy does not make any sense.

I suspect a majority of Coalition members of Parliament do not believe that human activity is responsible for very much, if any, change in the climate.

On that basis, why do they have a climate change policy?  What is the point of having a policy for something you don't believe is a problem?

Alternatively, for the minority of Coalition members who do believe human activity is responsible for a change in the climate, why has the Coalition adopted a policy that does not include pricing carbon?  A policy imperative which the overwhelming consensus of reports on this issue, from the Shergold Report through to the Garnaut Report and the Productivity Commission's Report, have recommended is the most efficient way to deal with the problem, and was adopted by the Howard, Rudd and Gillard Governments, and supported by the Turnbull Opposition?

While the Coalition is riding an anti-Gillard, anti-carbon tax wave currently, in policy terms, they are on flimsy ground.  

The Coalition is hoping that the Gillard Government will botch the introduction of the scheme, or won't pay enough compensation, or will be beset by any other number of potential problems; and as sure as night follows day, the media will be replete with stories of people who claim to be much worse off as a result of the policy (whether that hardship is real or a media beat up - perish the thought) and every price rise on every item will be attributed to the carbon tax (Mon Dieu! Pas possible!).

Additionally, the ALP might panic and knife Julia Gillard before the next election, almost certainly ensuring their defeat by giving the public more of the same of 2010.

While the Coalition is easily "winning" the climate change "debate", until the Government releases its policy and, more importantly, implements it, the final nature of the electorate's decision is yet to be determined.

Currently Abbott holds the easier position, which explains the Coalition's overwhelming lead in the opinion polls, but by the time of the next election those positions might well be reversed and it might be Gillard who has the easier position.  

Whether that will be enough to translate into a third term (which are never easy to win) time will tell.  Gillard and the ALP might have damaged themselves so badly with the public that it doesn't matter how good their final policy is, and irrespective of whatever other policies they implement in any other areas, the public will reject them anyway.  

Nevertheless, the reality is - and the leaders and the parties have only themselves to blame for this - the electorate's decision is, and will be, determined not by an enthusiastic embracing of either side, but by a choice between the lesser of two evils.

When you take the electorate for mugs, as both parties and leaders have done on climate change, the electorate will repay you in-kind, and with interest. 

This is an accurate depiction of the mood of the electorate:



 So it's well past time for a little bit of this. 

Thursday 2 June 2011

Conscience: The ripple of hope

Colleagues and scholars from coast to coast, across Bass Strait and all the ships at sea.

Dateline: Australia, Federal Politics 2011.

The attacks on Cate Blanchett this week have been a disgrace, and those making the attacks have behaved contemptibly - both in the media and in the Parliament.


Not satisfied with only having real estate agents, advertising people and car salesmen more poorly regarded by the public than journalists or politicians for honesty and ethical standards; various journalists and politicians did their very best to drag their respective professions to the bottom of the list (Roy Morgan Image of Professions Survey 2011 see here).

Indeed their activities might well result in the first recording of a zero rating.  Certainly the measure of their integrity would be of sub-atomic proportions.  What a great credit to their professions and our democracy they are.  

We can only speculate as to the intent of the attacks, but we can deduce its likely effect.  Which prominent Australian would now want to speak up about an issue for fear of being attacked as Blanchett was?  For fear of placing their career in jeopardy?

In fact, Dick Smith was so concerned about being attacked if he appeared in the "Say-Yes" advertisements, that he declined to do so.




But this is not new.

Bobby Limb, the hugely successful national television personality and star of the Mobil Limb Show and Bobby Limb's Sound of Music (both top rating programs in the 1960s and early 1970s) claimed on Bert Newton's Good Morning Australia, that his television career was ended abruptly because he appeared in the ALP "It's Time" election advertisements in 1972 (It's Time advertisement, YouTube link see here).  Limb claimed that his appearance in support of the ALP greatly annoyed the management of the television stations at the time and that, as a result, they were determined to make an example of him to the rest of the television industry.

All three situations regarding Blanchett, Smith and Limb, were reprehensible and totally unacceptable.





Robert F. Kennedy said in his "Day of Affirmation" address at Cape Town University, South Africa, June 6, 1966 (Full transcript and audio here):


"Few men are willing to brave the disapproval of their fellows, the censure of their colleagues, the wrath of their society.  Moral courage is a rarer commodity than bravery in battle or great intelligence.  Yet it is the one essential, vital quality for those who seek to change the world - which yields most painfully to change."
"Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centres of energy and daring, those ripples build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance."
It is conscience that is the key driver of standing up for an ideal, or acting to improve the lot of others, or striking out against injustice, which then sends forth that tiny ripple of hope. 

Legendary Rugby League coach Jack Gibson used to say, "You can't coach speed."  Similarly, you can't teach conscience, as Sophocles said, "There is no witness so terrible, no accuser so powerful as conscience which dwells within us."

But there are those with vested interests who will 'do their worst' to try to intimidate their fellow citizens and stop them from acting upon their conscience.  There is no greater crime against a democracy.  As Thomas Jefferson said, "All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent."











To Cate Blanchett, Dick Smith, the late Bobby Limb and all prominent citizens who wish to be publicly involved in the political process, consider these words by the American abolitionist, William Lloyd Garrison in the first edition of his anti-slavery newspaper, The Liberator in 1831:


"I am in earnest - I will not equivocate - I will not excuse - I will not retreat a single inch - AND I WILL BE HEARD."


And from Coretta Scott King on The Ed Sullivan Show, March 22, 1970, when introducing clips from the two of the most famous speeches of her husband, the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, who was assassinated less than 2 years earlier.  
("I Have a Dream" August 28, 1963 and "I've Been to the Mountaintop" April 3, 1968.  See YouTube clip here):





"My husband had a dream, but he was no dreamer.  He moved and he did.  He preached non-violence, but he lived day by day with the real courage that violent men really do not have." 


It takes no courage to shamefully attack from behind a wall of newsprint or the safety of a studio microphone; or to bellow ignorantly and roar distortions of facts in the Parliament or 'on the doors' outside - but it does take courage to stand up for an ideal, especially when faced with the bullying display we have witnessed this past week.

Finally, remember this phrase of defiance by the Spartan King, Leonidas, to the King of Persia, Xerxes, at The Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC when the Persian King demanded Leonidas lay to down his forces' arms and surrender because the Greeks were outnumbered by the Persian forces by more than 20 to 1:  



Leonidas replied, "Μολὼν λαβέ"  "Molon Labe" - "Come and take them!"

Blog Archive

Our home

Our home
Earthrise over the moon (click on picture to view film)

The pale blue dot

The pale blue dot
Earth viewed from Saturn (click on picture to view film clip)

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Our Home Galaxy

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A sister galaxy

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Another sister galaxy

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Triangulum (click on picture to view short film clip)

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Our farthest view of the Universe

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The virgo super cluster of galaxies

The virgo super cluster of galaxies
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Galaxies within 1 billion light years

Universe

Universe