MedVision ad

Australian Politics (6 Viewers)

spiny norman

Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2004
Messages
884
Location
Rivo
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
I would wager everything I own and more that Rudd made that decision(if he took it at all) against his better instincts and did so to sooth the rumblings of the Kelvin Thompsons and Laurrie Fergusons in the party. Certainly cowardice is not something to be praised but given the man was knifed for being a social democrat and for refusing to treat asylum seekers like a political football, he can be forgiven.
What on earth do you think Laurie Ferguson represents in the party? I think you'll find on issues of racial integration he's actually one of the most progressive MPs out there, having built strong links with several migrant communities in his area. This whole paragraph comes off as someone who's commenting on something they really don't have any great knowledge on. Rudd wasn't "knifed" for being a social democrat and for refusing to treat asylum seekers like a political football, anyway. Gillard's far more a leftist than he?

I'm not even sure whether your defending this ugly side of labor as being innocent of the charges I've thrown at them, or turning round and saying "what of it?" What does the war on terror have to do with this? They didn't support a war in order to screw over some arabs they did it in hope that two states capable of being great, proud countries would be able to grow to fruition under democracy.
And in the process have created two of the world's greatest humanitarian crises of the past decade.

And when Rudd's policies been at times unfair, they were never xenophobic. His rhetoric was never implying that there was good reason to be scared or disdainful of migrants like Gillard's is, it was always framed carefully to avoid doing so.[/QUOTE

HE EXPLICITLY SINGLED OUT TWO RACES WHO WERE NO LONGER WELCOME TO COME HERE. Whether his rhetoric outright said that or not, that was the message and intent of what he said. Plus he echoed Howard with the whole "We will choose who comes here" bullshit. You've completely whitewashed Rudd's legacy so as to counter your longtime dislike of Gillard. She's hardly been scared or disdainful of migrants, just saying we need understanding in the debate. And when one side's saying they're terrorists and the other side saying people against it are a bunch of rednecks, that's pretty spot on?

She should have buggered the coalition as Rudd did! She has given so much credence to this horrible, nasty xenophobia since she became prime minister, credence which she can never take back. During the oceanic viking crisis Rudd refused to debate the issue in parliament at the expense of his own personal image so that the scaremongering would get minimal press coverage. Rudd was still ahead in the polls, in a better position than John Howard of Bob Hawke had been in three years into their premiership, the coalition was gaining ground because it was an election year.
Again, he froze claims from two specific countries. I don't see how you can say that's not giving creedence to xenophobia? Which she looks she'll unfreeze for Afghans, which Rudd probably would not have done. And has called for a "frank political discussion" and has backed much of Burnside's claims while distancing herself from his calling voters from certain electorates rednecks.

I live in those western suburbs bro, I have lived in Guildford all my life, I was schooled in Liverpool, my extended family all comes from Blacktown. Don't tell me I don't know the impacts that migration has had on the area and I know from whom the voices of complaints come and Julia Burnside was absolutely right to call them rednecks. His later statement that the comment needed to be read in context disapointed me because there is no better word than encapsulates those backward thinking, simple minded, parochial bumpkins than "redneck."
I think people whose concern, for example, is that migrant families are all drifting to the western suburbs where there's no infrastructure to handle such large numbers aren't necessarily backward thinking rednecks. I also wasn't necessarily referring to you when I made the point, just saying there's a point to be had that this rhetoric is elitist that does more harm for social liberals than good. I've lived in Blacktown since I was four years old myself, and don't question there's racists in the area, but to write off all people with issues in the area as people with invalid, backwards issues is, well, invalid and backwards.
 

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
Calm down Lentern. She's better than Rudd (she actually negotiates and consults for a start) and the Greens still have balance of power. Unless she makes a deal with the devil (Coalition) nothing of hers will pass without Greens support, which makes inhumane refugee policy an uphill battle.
 

Lentern

Active Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
4,980
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
What on earth do you think Laurie Ferguson represents in the party? I think you'll find on issues of racial integration he's actually one of the most progressive MPs out there, having built strong links with several migrant communities in his area. This whole paragraph comes off as someone who's commenting on something they really don't have any great knowledge on. Rudd wasn't "knifed" for being a social democrat and for refusing to treat asylum seekers like a political football, anyway. Gillard's far more a leftist than he?



And in the process have created two of the world's greatest humanitarian crises of the past decade.

And when Rudd's policies been at times unfair, they were never xenophobic. His rhetoric was never implying that there was good reason to be scared or disdainful of migrants like Gillard's is, it was always framed carefully to avoid doing so.[/QUOTE

HE EXPLICITLY SINGLED OUT TWO RACES WHO WERE NO LONGER WELCOME TO COME HERE. Whether his rhetoric outright said that or not, that was the message and intent of what he said. Plus he echoed Howard with the whole "We will choose who comes here" bullshit. You've completely whitewashed Rudd's legacy so as to counter your longtime dislike of Gillard. She's hardly been scared or disdainful of migrants, just saying we need understanding in the debate. And when one side's saying they're terrorists and the other side saying people against it are a bunch of rednecks, that's pretty spot on?



Again, he froze claims from two specific countries. I don't see how you can say that's not giving creedence to xenophobia? Which she looks she'll unfreeze for Afghans, which Rudd probably would not have done. And has called for a "frank political discussion" and has backed much of Burnside's claims while distancing herself from his calling voters from certain electorates rednecks.



I think people whose concern, for example, is that migrant families are all drifting to the western suburbs where there's no infrastructure to handle such large numbers aren't necessarily backward thinking rednecks. I also wasn't necessarily referring to you when I made the point, just saying there's a point to be had that this rhetoric is elitist that does more harm for social liberals than good. I've lived in Blacktown since I was four years old myself, and don't question there's racists in the area, but to write off all people with issues in the area as people with invalid, backwards issues is, well, invalid and backwards.
I would have had vastly more to do with Laurie than any other contributor to this place and the man is an old fashioned nationlist. Fiercely dedicated to Guildford and Merrylands where he group up but heartbroken for how the demographic has changed over the past thirty years. He does everything as he thinks his father would have and fails to recognise that Jack Ferguson was already behind his time when he finally reached deputy premier thirty five years ago. As the member of I think is close to Australia's most multicultural electorate he has been forced to swallow some of his misgivings but his Tuckeyesque racism still shows its ugly head time to time like during Petro Georgiou's private member bill back in 05.

As a researcher with the group, I've sat in on meetings members of the YCW have had with him for various reasons and he often says things like "I'm sure people like you aren't in anyway the cause of these problems but with those kind of people out there we're under a lot of pressure to..." "Obviously we're having some trouble with, well you know the types of people I'm referring to" "These sort of people will create a few headaches but ultimately...." No prizes for guessing which groups he is talking about on each and every occasion. He actually sounds like he anticipates us to be racist and wants to make sure we don't feel uncomfortable being honest and open about it.

And no Gillard is certainly not more progressive or socialistic than Rudd, her membership of the Ferguson left is all about unions, sticking up for the blue collar aussie, reclaiming Howard's battlers. Honestly, why do you think that the last stand before the coup (I don't count Emerson because he's the only mp with less friends than Rudd) did not come from any of the state right factions, but from the socialist left, in particular Lindsay Tanner? What do you think the prime minister meant in his second last press conference when he said "I will not be lurching to the right?" They explained as much on insiders recently, that any hope he had of continuing as leader necessitated a move away from all his intellectual progressivism and an invasion of Howard/Abbotts favoured turfs.

The merits of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars have nothing to do with left or right, progressive of conservative. The only possible relevance they have is on the question of whether we should be accepting refugees from Afghanistan and you'd be barking mad if you thought Gillard opposed the decision to freeze them in cabinet or kitchen cabinet wherever the decision was taken. At any rate Rudd never singled out two races like you say, albeit incorrectly he singled out two areas of conflict as no longer being dangerous enough to automatically warrant refugee status. Again, that was a very unRudd like line of thought and his language the whole time suggests to me and anyone else with atleast two brain cells that it was a decision taken against his better instincts, proposed by the jackals who would later take his job for refusing to lurch to the right on asylum seekers and for refusing to back down over a tax on overpaid blobs in western Australia.

Finally the people that get so worked up are almost all inherently racist. They might try to cloak their racism in the thin veil of such infrastructure concerns but its just so damn uncanny how few of them are remotely impassioned about getting more infrastructure money (or higher taxes) as opposed to keeping the immigrants out. It's uncanny how quickly they get whipped into a frenzy about a possible mosque and the traffic concerns it will bring but couldn't care less about three new churches and a pre school being built in the same area. And what has your champion done? She has pardoned them, she has exonerated them and said they were being reasonable and she understood them. She is either lying or being racist, neither of which are qualities to defend from a so called progressive.

Calm down Lentern. She's better than Rudd (she actually negotiates and consults for a start) and the Greens still have balance of power. Unless she makes a deal with the devil (Coalition) nothing of hers will pass without Greens support, which makes inhumane refugee policy an uphill battle.
Get real, how accepting of such an argument were you when someone here suggested that the filter was nothing to get worked up about because in its present form (or anything that remotely resembled its present form) it would never get through both houses? Her language, he pardoning of racism has been enough for me in itself, it's disgusting and it will make it all the more harder when we finally get another progressive leader to repair the damage.
 

Lentern

Active Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
4,980
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Lol goodbye Faulks. I thought they might have atleast given her until the election before they derailed Julia, whose next to go? I reckon its Jenny Mack or Dr Craig. Never mind, there is a perfect fill in for defence minister in their ranks who undoubtedly is owed something by the prime minister for all his loyalty and support over the past six years. Go forth:



Fitz! Lemmings inherent the earth, Bonehead Laurie for finance minister, Larikin Latham to contest Melbourne! Comrade Carr for Foreign Affairs!
 

vanush

kdslkf
Joined
Oct 10, 2004
Messages
547
Location
Sydney, Australia
Gender
Male
HSC
2006
Lol Gillard is a joke, I don't see how she has silenced all those people who said Rudd lacked conviction; her politics are subversive and belong to another era. The Labour party has made a terrible choice :spzz:
 
Last edited:

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
Get real, how accepting of such an argument were you when someone here suggested that the filter was nothing to get worked up about because in its present form (or anything that remotely resembled its present form) it would never get through both houses? Her language, he pardoning of racism has been enough for me in itself, it's disgusting and it will make it all the more harder when we finally get another progressive leader to repair the damage.
She's shit, but she's better than Rudd. By a small margin.

I have no illusions she's progressive or pro-rights. One need only examine her stance on gay marriage to see that. Her words on refugees are disgusting.

But she does one thing Rudd did not: consult. Both her own party and other parties (e.g. Greens). This makes her far more suitable as a PM.
 

Lentern

Active Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
4,980
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
She's shit, but she's better than Rudd. By a small margin.

I have no illusions she's progressive or pro-rights. One need only examine her stance on gay marriage to see that. Her words on refugees are disgusting.

But she does one thing Rudd did not: consult. Both her own party and other parties (e.g. Greens). This makes her far more suitable as a PM.
Consult who? Rudd didn't box out the individual backbenchers, the loners and the rebels, it was the Carr's, Ludwigs and Arbibs, factional hacks and union bosses who spend more time lining up the numbers in caucus then working on policy. People whom Rudd was probably right to think had combined abilities less than that of his own and Lindsay Tanners. Do you really think humble mortals like Bob Mcmullan, Craig Emerson or Maxine Mckew are actually going to have any more say under Gillard? Or that there is going to be any real compromises struck with the greens before the next election? After the election, sure, the greens will hold the balance of power in their own right but given at the moment Steve Fielding and Nick Xenophon are also needed, Rudd's blind siding of Brown was not unreasonable.

I have ultimately decided I will still preferance Labor candidates ahead of Liberal ones this election, not because I actually prefer Gillard to Tony Abbott but because a liberal victory basically ensures that there will never be a Turnbull premiership and there is nobody in the mix in the ALP right now who I think would make a particularly good prime minister. In a few years I'll get behind the Plibersek bandwagon.
 

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
Fraser backs Gillard's asylum plan - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser has voiced his support for Julia Gillard's plan for asylum seekers.

Mr Fraser set up Australia's first regional processing centres to deal with asylum seekers during the 1970s when the refugees were Vietnamese boat people.

He recently confirmed that he quit the Liberal Party that he once led, in part because of his disgust over the Coalition's scaremongering on asylum seekers.

Mr Fraser says Ms Gillard's policy is better than former Liberal prime minister John Howard's Pacific Solution.

"If the objective is to stop getting into dangerous boats and therefore to remove that element of danger, and also to take people smugglers out of the equation, then I think there is a significant difference between the Gillard policy and the opposition policy, which was really a revival of the Pacific Solution," he said.

"Which wasn't... people were still coming on boats, once they were caught they'd be taken off to some other remote island and to a place that was not a signatory to the Refugee Convention. I understand East Timor is a signatory to the Refugee Convention.

"That also creates an obligation, which makes for a real difference."

He says the Government should draw on the lessons learnt by the immigration of Vietnamese refugees during his time as prime minister.

"This to me has the opportunity to draw on the experience of the Indochinese exodus in the 1970s because that was a regional solution," he said.

"We were conscious that if the sorts of boats involved that would have been an extraordinarily dangerous journey and many thousands would have perished at sea without anyone knowing anything about it.

"We had to try to stop that happening, so establishing a centre in Malaysia was an essential part of that."

Bipartisan approach

Mr Fraser also praised Ms Gillard for taking the heat out of debate.

"She's laid some facts on the table about how the numbers of asylum seekers, especially the number of boats, are a very, very small part of total migration and indeed a small part of even refugee intake," she said.

"Parties [were] competing [on] who can be toughest, playing politics with the lives of people who were in many cases, the majority of cases fleeing terror at home.

"Now Australia is much better than that and so I hope that debate can be put aside and the language that Prime Minister Gillard set out, sort to give the facts, the numbers, the reasons for what she's doing.

"She's trying to take the emotion and the hype out of the debate and I would like to think that other people will respond."

He is now calling on Opposition Leader Tony Abbott to adopt a bipartisan approach to the issue.

"I would advise the Opposition to back off and try to take steps that would enable a bipartisan policy to be adopted," he said.

"I think the Prime Minister while not mentioning bipartisan policy has certainly, by the language she has used, by the decisions she's made has, if the Opposition had the wits and the will, she's really opened the door to that possibility.

"But it's the most demeaning debate for Australia when you have political parties competing, you know who's toughest, who's nastiest to extraordinarily vulnerable people. Now Australia is so much better than that."
 
Last edited:

Lentern

Active Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
4,980
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Very saddening but then not even David Marr thinks in lockstep with me on all matters.
 

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
Julia Gillard ups the xenophobic rhetoric towards refugees, speaks out against equal marriage rights for gays, adopts the Rudd plan to pretend climate change doesn't exist for another few years, and reiterates her commitment to Internet censorship. What a lady. What a fucking horrible lady!

Nothing but a Rudd clone controlled by Labour Right factional leaders. Bleh.

Economist warns Gillard on carbon price delay - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
iTWire - Greens warn Gillard over internet filter
 

Lentern

Active Member
Joined
Aug 3, 2008
Messages
4,980
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Julia Gillard ups the xenophobic rhetoric towards refugees, speaks out against equal marriage rights for gays, adopts the Rudd plan to pretend climate change doesn't exist for another few years, and reiterates her commitment to Internet censorship. What a lady. What a fucking horrible lady!

Nothing but a Rudd clone controlled by Labour Right factional leaders. Bleh.

Economist warns Gillard on carbon price delay - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
iTWire - Greens warn Gillard over internet filter
Don't pin her faults on Rudd, he was always trying to defuse the issue of boat people, "there's no silver bullet" etc, she's been trying to make everyone believe that the government can actually stop the boats if its tough enough. And the climate change thing was largely the doing of Swan, Gillard and Arbib, Rudd actually benched himself in the kitchen cabinet debate. What was it, 40 minutes of sleep Rudd got at Copenhagen? He was way more into climate change than she and her precious union members ever were.

I'll give you gay marriage but even still consider, Rudd could probably blame it on his religious upbringing and not wanting to go to war with the institution which has played so large a role in his life. What can it be for Gillard other than plain irrational bigotry?
 

Chemical Ali

지금은 소녀시대
Joined
Feb 22, 2006
Messages
1,728
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Wow, a good policy from Tony Abbott:

Abbott to put school principals in charge of building projects | The Australian

A COALITION government would put principals in charge of the $14 billion primary school building program
.

Tony Abbott and opposition education spokesman Christopher Pyne yesterday outlined a plan to address concerns about a lack of value for money under the Building the Education Revolution, committing the Coalition to spending the full amount allocated to the BER.

The plan reverses the Coalition's previous position to freeze spending under the BER until a taskforce, led by businessman Brad Orgill, issues its report into complaints about the scheme. It follows the declaration by Mr Pyne at the end of May that the Coalition "will redirect funding directly to schools and principals to manage projects".

It also signals the Coalition's broader commitment to handing school principals greater autonomy, with Mr Pyne describing it as a key education reform.

Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar.

End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.

"I'm very passionate about principal autonomy; to me it's the clear difference between a reformed education system where the child is front and centre or an education system where the bureaucracy is front and centre," he said.

The Opposition Leader released the Coalition's Real Action Plan To Stop Labor's School Hall Waste And Provide A Schools Building Boost after touring Annangrove Public School on Sydney's northwestern outskirts, which first raised concerns about its BER project last September.

He claimed allowing schools to manage their building projects would enable most of them to save about one-third of their total funding through hiring local contractors, shopping around and controlling the budget.

"We trust the principals with our kids' futures, why can't we trust them to manage taxpayers' dollars?"
this pretty much seals Liberal > Labor for me
 

Chemical Ali

지금은 소녀시대
Joined
Feb 22, 2006
Messages
1,728
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Lol your vote tips on something like that?
Well, I live in a safe labour seat, vote Greens in the senate, and as far as I can tell the 2 major parties are more or less indistinguishable on 95% of things

so yeah that's about all there is to go on really
 

Slidey

But pieces of what?
Joined
Jun 12, 2004
Messages
6,600
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
Poll would have largely been completed before the President/Prime minister fiasco I suspect. I guess these things will always vary but I'd wager its more about even stephens at the moment.
That poll was conducted over the weekend. As in today and yesterday. What President fiasco? You mean Obama?

Labour will leak their votes to the Greens once again. It's inevitable once Greens voters/leaners find out Labour is against gay marriage, against immediate action on climate change, refuse to ditch internet censorship (delay won't buy any Greens respect), and that Gillard is mildly xenophobic and racist.
 
Joined
Dec 12, 2003
Messages
3,492
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
That poll was conducted over the weekend. As in today and yesterday. What President fiasco? You mean Obama?
Something about how Gillard consulted the East Timorese President, who occupies a figurehead role similar to the Australian GG, about the establishment of a regional refugee processing facility rather than the Prime Minister. Or maybe vice versa.

I have no idea how I am going to vote.
 
Last edited:

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 6)

Top