For those wondering what Dame Slap might have to say about the Lehrmann matter, keep wondering.
Apparently Lehrmann didn't leak to her any wild tales of coke and hookers and so today's serve was plain dudders Rice, with no added spicy Dame Slap sauce ...
The pond remains righteous in its desire to avoid going down that Lehrmann rabbit hole ...
Over on either side of the yarn of coke and hookers came standard tales of reptile green rage, with the far right top spot easily being chambered by Geoff ... while down below the reptiles finally noticed the slaughter in the killing fields, though apparently it's all unintentional ... and has only been triggered by an Australian death, and never mind the thousands of other innocents slaughtered ...The story of the reptile green obsession continued below the fold ...
Dame Slap was safely consigned to blathering about the DEI brigade, while the bromancer attempted to divert attention from the slaughter by resorting to blather about the axis of weevils.
The rat from the deep north was still talking of the war with China by Xmas, while Tom upheld the greenie rage by slavering at the mouth about the Great Green Society ...
Luckily the immortal Rowe was to hand to remind the pond of who is currently spreading the killing fields ...
As for all the greenie bashing, code for the new breed and style of climate science denialism in the lizard Oz, the pond was reminded of a story in Crikey by Christopher Warren, Never mind the science, News Corp has strengthened its climate denialism machine, Climate crisis denial can come in many forms — and Murdoch's empire has all bases covered. (paywall).
Instead of attempting to cover all the greenie-bashing this day, in lieu of quoting Tom et al, please permit the pond to quote the history per Warren:
No worries, it’s time to call in the ideology engineers for a bit of message realignment. With just a spot of tinkering, the machine has cranked out two new talking points for the US company’s loyal political wing in the Liberal and National Parties. These are the “ute tax” and the “absolute travesty” of the aesthetics of offshore wind farms.
They’ve reengineered the underlying denialism, too. Sure, they say now, the climate may be changing, but it’s not our fault. It’s not, as the cloistered academics would say, “anthropogenic”.
If global heating is not caused by humans burning fossil fuels, why would humans be able to do anything about it? (And, just in case, why not go, umm, nukular?)
This so-called “attribution” denialism accepts the effect while denying the cause. It’s long been part of the denialist toolkit (remember sun spots?), along with what Australia’s leading analyst of denialism, John Cook, calls denying the trend (“it’s just not happening”) and denying the impact (“it’s not making any difference anyway”).
“Attribution” has always been the weakest form of denialism, raising doubts rather than definitively rejecting. But as a recent US study found, its danger lies in being the gateway drug to a more full-blown repudiation of the science itself.
And the guide at the gate ushering them through? Why Fox News, of course, and the grab bag of right-wing media voices following on behind.
Rupert Murdoch’s bold 2007 commitment to zero corporate emissions (under, it was said, urging from his then likely heir James) was short lived. Once the global right embraced denialism as a core strategy, his media outlets, particularly here in Australia, quickly pivoted.
From Abbott’s “absolute crap” moment in 2009, it became central to News Corp’s editorial positioning. A 2013 study by the University of Technology Sydney found that the company’s then two largest papers –Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph and the Herald Sun in Melbourne — were overwhelmingly hostile to climate change, with more than 60% of articles on the subject either outright rejecting the science or raising doubts about it.
In 2014, even the normally cautious Press Council felt compelled to express “considerable concern” about inaccuracies in the company’s coverage of data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Shrug. “Whatever happened to global warming?” the company’s Wall Street Journal insouciantly asked later that year.
Why did climate denial suddenly become a touchstone for the global right? After all, when Rupert was pumping zero emissions, John Howard seemed to have been dragged reluctantly by his then environment minister Malcolm Turnbull to the idea of an emission trading scheme. The following year, Republican presidential candidate John McCain mouthed similar support.
Follow the money. Fossil fuel corporates and the foundations they fund together with corrupt petro-states built a climate change denial countermovement. Surprising, I know, but here in Australia too.
As we’re discovering again with “ute tax”, offshore wind farms and largely astro-turfed protests against solar on farmland, this denialist countermovement has built its protests around neoliberal, anti-regulatory talking points. It’s been tagged “the anti-reflexivity thesis“, which is the argument that denialism is standing up for industrial capitalism.
It appeals to a certain old-style machismo — the good ol’ days of physical, manual jobs that matter for poorly educated men (and to the regional communities built around them).
It was this thesis that Abbott captured in three words: “Axe the tax!”
Now, the Liberal-National-News Corp coalition is having another go at the same old play. But, suddenly, it’s finding the going that much harder.
Continued heat records have shattered denials of the trend, while bushfires, floods and mass extinctions are shattering the comfort of impact denialism. The enduring attribution denialism is proving just too weak to sustain the right’s countermovement.
In October 2021, in the wake of the IPCC report that definitively linked extreme events like Australia’s bushfires to global heating, News Corp attempted to shift to talk of “real practical solutions” (unsuccessfully as it quickly turned out). It coincided with Canberra’s political gallery having one of its regular collective hope-over-experience frissons when Morrison (remember him?) committed to net-zero by 2050 (insert: smiley face) devoid of any practical measures (insert: sad face).
Now, about 30 months later, we’re back where we started. The only change? Right-wing media and the political parties they support seem determined to leap over the science to a fact-free denial in practice.
Well yes, and cue today's exercise in greenie-bashing ...
Meanwhile, the pond decided to hand both the bromancer and Dame Slap red cards.
The bro can stay off the field until he has some insight into the killing fields, while the pond is standing back and standing by for Dame Slap to finally reveal her relationship with Lehrmann. It could take a little time ...
Iin the interim, there's a few distractions to be found ... with the reptiles attempting to slip Mein Gott's latest effort through without the pond noticing, but Mein Gott, what would a day be without Mein Gott ...
Now some might think it pretty thin gruel and obvious, what with it being served up with an abundance of snaps, and much talk of woke and freedumb boy, but Mein Gott, take your pleasures where you find them ...
Naturally the pond wanted to maintain the woke rage, but with Dame Slap red carded, and the pond not wanting to talk about the axis of weevils with the bro, who could act as a bonus?
Never to fear, the Lynch mob is here, and is he ready for a lynching or what ...
The Lynch-party: "Debate on Australia's first identity-politics referendum simply did not take place on campuses where identity politics obtain." Now personally, I reckon it was Dutt's "If you don't know, vote no" that won it. The idea that a Voice (note capital V) would be imbedded in the Constitution, but that its ways and means and finances would be later structured by normal parliamentary proceedings - and could be changed and adjusted as necessary without having to stage a referendum - just didn't seem to get through.
ReplyDeleteTo me, doing it that way was simply good sense; not all decisions have to be made together at the same time and that way gave the Voice's existence constitutional protection without constraining its practice. But it seems that for a lot of Australians, this raised all sorts of "don't know" fears - and hence vote No.
Kay Lee "If you don’t give a toss about any future except your own, if all you care about is using the system for personal gain (looking at you Tim Wilson), if you think poverty is the result of laziness and that the environment can look after itself, then libertarianism probably sounds good.
ReplyDeleteBut what a heartless, ravaged world it would be."
https://theaimn.com/the-rise-of-libertarianism-is-threatening-our-way-of-life/
Kez, there is a song here.
"But what a heartless, ravaged world it would be."
Millimeter by millimeter we get closer to fusion power. Another 50 or so years and we might even have only another 100 years or so to go.
ReplyDeleteKorean Fusion Reactor Sets New Record For Sustaining 100 Million Degree Plasma
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/korean-fusion-reactor-sets-new-record-for-sustaining-100-million-degree-plasma/ar-BB1kUTy8?
Given that the newly-announced next Governor-General is (1) Not a bloke, ((2) Not ex-military and (3) has worked in a variety of fairly mainstream roles which are nonetheless suspect in the eyes of the IPA and the like, can we expect a flurry of articles from the Reptiles decrying the position’s infestation by “wokism” in the next few days? Almost certainly. Just as likely is that none of them will contain any definition of the term.
ReplyDeleteI remember some years ago encountering the idea that each language has a smallish subset of words that really aren't (can't be ?) independently defined but one just has to know what they mean (and that English had relatively few of them, but I can't actually think of an example right now). So I guess 'woke' is just another member of that set.
DeleteIt is happening already. Late this afternoon, the Dog Bovverer was doing the 'Sam Mostyn is a fine person, has done good things, yaddah yaddah - but is the wrong person for the job; she has supported every 'woke' movement in the country'. As I recall, he included believing in climate change as a 'woke' issue.
DeletePerhaps the reptiles thought that, as they already had a couple of Dames available (Groan and Slap) one of them would have been a shoo in for G-G, without the trouble of having to draw up new documentation for the title.
Looking at the more ordinary press brought this up:
Delete"Gender equality, social justice and giving a voice to those who go unheard have been the hallmarks of a long career spanning law, business and advocacy".
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2024/apr/04/how-will-sam-mostyns-career-long-advocacy-shape-her-role-as-governor-general
Yep, I guess that all sounds pretty wokey-dokey.
Yep, here we go:
Delete‘Standards have fallen’: Andrew Bolt criticises appointment of new Attorney General
https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/standards-have-fallen-andrew-bolt-criticises-appointment-of-new-attorney-general/ar-BB1kZCFP?
Mein Gott can sure spin anything to suit the Murdoch web of deceit.
ReplyDeleteHe proudly proclaims that Eric Abetz won the most votes in the Seat of Franklin at the recent Tasmanian state Election.
Wow, that means Abetz received 6,700 votes to get him another go at the taxpayer funded trough.
In the rotten democracy of Tasmania, where a Tasmanian Senate vote is worth roughly 18 NSW Senate votes, it only takes a handful of like-minded religious cranks in the Bible Belt of Tassie, to get the eagle-eyed nephew of Uncle Otto over the line.
So how d'you reckon Jacqui Lambie gets elected ?
DeleteApropos the infallible pope DP I introduce M Rowson,
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/picture/2024/apr/02/martin-rowson-on-benjamin-netanyahu-on-top-of-the-world-cartoon?CMP=share_btn_url
Wokus Pokus
ReplyDeleteA vision I'd like to evoke
Is a hellhole of brimstone and smoke
Where reptiles lie deep
In tormented sleep
From which they can never be woke...
Ahh, woke - woken ! Nah yeah ✅
DeleteThank you again Kez. Always worth going back a day to see what late inspiration comes to contributors here.
DeleteCheers GB and Chadders!
Delete