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sinking in the warm cesspool of the blancmange....
The ‘modern’ Labor Party does not lack power, but it lacks the will to use it. Andrew Brown on Labor’s retreat from reform and what it means for Australia. Part 2 of 6. Labor’s unwillingness to embark on major reform is not a failure of intelligence, competence, or goodwill. It is a governing disposition. Power is treated as something to survive rather than wield. Risk is managed. Conflict is avoided. Moral judgment is filtered through polling before it is tested against justice. What remains is a government fluent in process and cautious to the point of paralysis. Structural reform is ruled out early. Not because it is wrong, but because it is uncomfortable. Consider resources. Mining super profits flow largely untaxed while public services strain. Australia extracts finite public assets and allows private accumulation to dominate the return. The diesel fuel rebate remains a multibillion-dollar subsidy to heavy industry long after its original rationale has evaporated. This is not prudence. It is timidity dressed as stability. Structural tax reform is endlessly acknowledged and endlessly deferred. Reports are written. Reviews are commissioned. Panels are convened. The outcome never changes. Wealth is protected. Work is taxed. Equity is postponed. The tax system drifts further from fairness while government insists it is acting responsibly by doing little. Productivity conundrumProductivity tells the same story. Corporate profits surge while output per worker stagnates. Market concentration is diagnosed and then tolerated. Grocery markets are dominated by two players. Farmers are squeezed at one end, consumers pay more at the other. Rent extraction is misnamed efficiency. Labor recognises the problem and declines to confront it. Higher education has shifted from opportunity to obligation. Student debt compounds ahead of wages. Graduates carry liabilities deep into adulthood, shaping choices about work, family, and risk. Education is no longer treated as a public good that lifts society. It is treated as a private investment whose costs are socialised only when politically convenient. Income support remains below the poverty line by design. This is known. It has been studied. It has been confirmed repeatedly. Yet payments remain inadequate. The pension is calibrated to frugality rather than dignity. Unemployment benefits are kept low as a disciplinary tool rather than lifted as a stabilising force. Poverty is treated as incentive rather than failure. The Voice followed the same arc of retreat. It was promised with conviction. It was delivered with hesitation. When resistance hardened, leadership receded. The government refused to campaign with force, refused to explain the proposal with clarity, and refused to treat the moment as one that required political risk. After defeat, there was no alternative path offered. Reconciliation was returned to rhetoric. Foreign policyForeign policy reveals the same reflex. On Israel and Palestine, moral clarity collapsed into evasion. Civilian suffering was abstracted. Language was sanitised. Accountability dissolved into process. This was not confusion. It was acquiescence. The facts were not unclear. The costs of speaking plainly were simply judged too high. Protecting Jewish Australians from antisemitism is a non-negotiable obligation of government. Importing the political priorities of a foreign state into Australian law is not. That distinction matters. It was not defended. Integrity reform followed the same pattern. A federal corruption watchdog was promised with urgency. What emerged was an institution designed not to disturb power. High thresholds. Limited transparency. Rare consequence. It exists, but it does not bite. A pattern of inactionAcross mining, tax, productivity, competition, education, income support, reconciliation, foreign policy, and integrity, the pattern is unmistakable. Power is present, reform is deferred, and conflict is avoided. This is not moderation. It is retreat. Modern Labor is shaped by a culture of risk minimisation. Decisions are filtered through marginal seat modelling before they are tested against justice. Courage is recoded as recklessness. Conviction becomes an electoral liability. Structural change is ruled out not because it is wrong, but because it might upset someone with a microphone. The result is a government that governs as if its primary duty is to avoid being attacked rather than to solve problems. It anticipates backlash and retreats before the fight begins. It mistakes quiet for competence and caution for wisdom. But power unused does not remain neutral. It accumulates elsewhere. In corporate boardrooms. In concentrated markets. In asset portfolios. In the quiet entrenchment of inequality. A government that refuses to choose sides has already chosen stability over justice, process over purpose, and safety over leadership. And retreat, once learned, becomes habit. https://michaelwest.com.au/the-australian-labor-party-and-the-habit-of-retreat/
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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twisted labor....
Labor senator Raff Ciccone has taken aim at the Greens, accusing them of twisting the war on Iran and Australia’s military support for the UAE into an unfair story of “subservience” to US President Donald Trump.
The left-wing party has claimed Mr Trump personally urged Anthony Albanese to deploy Australian forces into the “illegal war” following a confirmed call between the two leaders ahead of the military announcement.
But the Prime Minister said the request granted by Australia came directly from UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
Mr Albanese has not disclosed the details of his conversation with Mr Trump.
On Wednesday, Senator Ciccone accused the Greens of undermining Australia’s national security for the sake of “ideology” during a planned statement in the Senate.
“Once again, the Greens have rushed to twist a complex international crisis into yet another argument against AUKUS, against the United States and against Israel,” he said.
“Every global crisis becomes another excuse to attack Australia’s alliances.
“Every conflict becomes another opportunity to rehearse the Greens’ ideological hostility to the US and Israel.
“And every piece of misinformation is deployed in service of a conclusion they had already reached before the facts were even known.
“For the Greens, every crisis overseas is just another excuse to attack Australia at home.”
The Iranian diaspora expressed “anger” and singled out the Greens for focusing on issues like the Australia-US alliance – including sustained criticism of the AUKUS defence pact – instead of the oppression waged on Iranians for decades, Senator Ciccone said.
“Our alliances are not about subservience. They are about sovereignty and shared values,” he said, singling out the trilateral defence pact as an asset to Australia’s national security.
“The Greens like to present these partnerships as a loss of sovereignty. In reality, they are the opposite,” he said.
“In fact, the Greens claim to care deeply about sovereignty abroad while campaigning relentlessly to weaken it here at home.”
Later, the Greens’ foreign affairs spokesman David Shoebridge – who spoke about 10 minutes after Senator Ciccone – did not address the Labor senator directly but said the Greens had condemned both the Iranian regime and its “violence” before adding they also condemned “the illegal violence of Israel and the US”.
He claimed the military assets being sent to the UAE freed up “other US military assets to be used in their illegal war against Iran”.
Australia has reiterated it is only providing military assets in a defensive capacity and is not participating in any “offensive” action against Iran.
https://au.news.yahoo.com/labor-senator-hits-greens-over-020125649.html
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WHATEVER WE THINK OF THE IRANIAN REGIME, OUR FRIENDS, THE USA, ARE TEN TIMES WORSE IN THE DESPICABLE TRICKERY AND KILLINGS... HELPING ANOTHER DESPOTIC REGIME IN THE GULF, THE UAE, TO DEFEND AGAINST IRAN BLASTING THE UAE'S AMERICAN BASES IS AKIN TO JOINING THE WAR AT THE HIP...
AUSTRALIA SHOULD CONDEMN THE US IN NO "MITIGATED TERMS" AND ALSO UNDERSTAND THE RUSSIAN POSITION IN ITS PROVOKED CONFICT BY THE WEST IN UKRAINE..... NOT UNDERSTANDING THE RUSSIANS IS BASICALLY ACCEPTING THAT JFK HAD TO BE ASSASSINATED [BY WHOMEVER] BECAUSE HE WAS PREVENTING WW3...
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT — SINCE 2005.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.