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soup kitchen politics....Opposition Leader Peter Dutton's appearance on Kitchen Cabinet provoked outrage over the show's glorification of the man despite his "crimes", writes Dr Jennifer Wilson. THE HOST of ABC TV’s Kitchen Cabinet, Annabel Crabb, took to Twitter/X at the weekend to denounce what she perceives as an ‘orgy of outrage’ from users at the appearance of Opposition Leader Peter Dutton on her show. Crabb claims her series offers politicians the rare opportunity to do a “soft” interview in the kitchens of their own homes as they prepare and share a meal with her. As Crabb points out, she can hardly go into the subject’s kitchen and be anything other than polite. The show wouldn’t last five minutes. Instead, politicians are guaranteed a safe environment to chat about who they are and how they got to where they are without being confronted or made to feel uncomfortable. At this point, one can only ask: Why? The premise is that we need to see “another side” of our elected representatives in order to appreciate their full humanity. It’s reminiscent of the “bring your whole self to work” initiative in which you express your “authentic” or “true” self in the workplace rather than cultivate a workplace persona. It’s probably picky to wonder what an authentic or true self actually is and if you really want to flaunt it in your workplace when you find it, but that’s another story. Critic Jane Goodall has a different take In her review of Crabb’s show, describing the social media reaction to Dutton’s appearance as ‘visceral moral outrage’. So, ‘orgy of outrage’ or ‘visceral moral outrage’? For starters, there’s never been a monstrous human who didn’t have “another side” and Peter Dutton is no exception. The question Crabb ought to answer is why it is important that we see another side of a politician who has brought so much terror and misery to others, including children, and who will undoubtedly do the same again if given the opportunity. At what point does a politician’s behaviour become so bereft of morality and humanity that showcasing their “other side” is nothing more than an effort to minimise their abuses while treating their victims with disregard bordering on contempt? When does the focus on “another side” become an attitude that minimises the dreadful sufferings inflicted on others by suggesting that there is some quality in Dutton that is worthy of recognition, despite his monstrous behaviour? In fact, there isn’t. Any politician who uses their power to degrade and torment the powerless has forfeited their right to display “another side”. The focus should be, always and forever, on their monstrous acts. This isn’t unforgiving. It’s respecting the suffering of their victims and holding the unrepentant perpetrator accountable. During his conversation with Crabb, Dutton refers to the “viciousness” and “depravity” of people he encountered during his years as a Queensland police officer. How many of them, one might wonder, incarcerated a family seeking refuge from persecution in a most vicious and depraved attempt to win votes and retain power? As reported in The Guardian in 2019: Peter Dutton has referred to the two children of the Biloela Tamil family as “anchor babies” and blamed them for costing taxpayers millions of dollars in incendiary comments defending the Government’s decision to deport the family.
In an interview on Thursday the Home Affairs Minister echoed anti-immigrant rhetoric from the United States, borrowing a term used by Donald Trump to justify a plan to end birth-right citizenship, to claim Labor, the Greens and refugee activists are attempting to “bully” the Morrison Government into allowing the family to stay. Crabb also gives Dutton an opportunity to explain his racism, another viscerally disturbing interlude. A racist politician surely should be condemned for their racism, not invited to convivially explain it over a custard slice and a nice glass of Riesling. The incongruity of the setting and the subject matter apparently entirely escape Crabb, who seems unable to comprehend the reasonable anger it provokes.
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pollies pay packet....
Federal politicians will all receive a healthy pay increase of 4 per cent from next month, after the independent body that sets politician pay determined previous increases for federal MPs had been too "conservative".
Key points:Based on the determination, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's salary will increase from $564,356 to $586,930, and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton's salary will increase from $401,561 to $417,623.
MPs will have a base pay of $225,742, up from $217,060 — though they can receive additional pay depending on whether they hold a ministry or shadow ministry, chair a committee, or act as speakers or party whips.
Politicians are also entitled to travel allowances, electorate allowances, provision of a vehicle or an allowance in lieu of a vehicle, and internet and phone services at their home.
The independent Remuneration Tribunal published that it was awarding a 4 per cent pay increase across the board, even though wage data shows the average salary has risen by slightly less, because it had been more conservative in its previous rulings.
The tribunal said that would ensure politician pay remains competitive.
"The Tribunal is aware the remuneration increases it has awarded to offices in its jurisdiction over the past decade have been conservative," it said in its determination.
"The tribunal’s primary focus is to provide competitive and equitable remuneration that is appropriate to the responsibilities and experience required of the roles, and that is sufficient to attract and retain people of calibre."
It noted that salaries were consistently set below comparable private sector roles in recognition of the public service being performed, and that office holders do not expect to be paid at private sector rates.
However the tribunal said this increase would be above the average improvement to wages in both the public and private sectors in the past year.
June 2023 wage figures in the public sector showed a 3.1 per cent increase in the past year, while was a 3.8 per cent lift in pays across the private sector, amounting to an overall increase of 3.6 per cent overall.
The tribunal said while private sector salaries had risen by 23 per cent in the past decade, politician pay had only increased by 14.75 per cent.
The tribunal lifted MP salaries by 2.75 per cent last year, but previous to that had not determined an increase for politicians since 2019, when they were raised by 2 per cent.
The latest ruling is the largest pay rise for MPs in more than a decade, and separates federal parliamentarians from some of their state colleagues.
In NSW, legislation was introduced to freeze politician pay for two years from July, which then-newly installed Premier Chris Minns described as a "budget-saving measure".
In Victoria, unions criticised the state government after an independent tribunal awarded politicians in that state a 3.5 per cent pay rise, saying unions must bargain for their workers to receive fair pay increases, while politicians have it "bestowed" upon them.
The tribunal says it is obliged to consider annual wage reviews by the Fair Work Commission as well as movements in public and private salaries in its deliberations.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-08-29/politician-pay-increased-4-per-cent/102787252
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you bastard....
By Richard Llewellyn
Stuart Rees has provided us with a penetrating look at the hyper-masculinity of recent utterances by the government Minister Pat Conroy. As is now de rigueur for most of the MSM (including, sadly, the ABC) these utterances are focussed on justification for AUKUS and naturally, implicit demonisation of China.
SNAFU – but wait: there’s more!
I don’t recall anybody ever labelling Conroy an intellectual heavyweight, so it is possibly unfair to expect of him that he would realise the stupidity of joining the conga-line of idiots fomenting an upsurge of pan-nationalism in Australia. However, by his use of the term ‘appeasement’ in his address to the recent Labor conference Conroy has broadened the scope of pro-militaristic attitudes towards acquiescence to the rise of fascism.
Yes, I did use the ‘f’ word. Yes, I am very well aware of Godwin’s Rule, in both its original narrow sense and more recently as a meme to (unsuccessfully) curtail the use of Nazi references as debate stoppers.
I surmise that Conroy thought he was being smugly clever to erect a bulwark against the usual neo-Conservative faction charges of ‘weak on Defence’. Indeed, that line of reasoning seems to be the modus operandi of the comedy trio of the current government defence jujumen: Marles, Conroy and Keogh.
It is the use of one of the most emotive terms in geostrategic thinking – residual from the carnage of war in the C20th – that singles out Conroy’s blundering into ground where angels would wear mine-proof boots. ‘Appeasement’ is understood to be shorthand for ‘cowardly lack of determination to act at any cost to curtail another entity’s encroachment into areas we consider to be of our interest’.
To be in a position where ‘appeasement’ can rightfully, or at least apparently rightfully in the eyes of a sufficient number of electors, be applied to a government is the political equivalent of being a camel and handing two bricks to the Opposition. So, governments adopt a combative attitude, and one handy epithet to throw around is that of defending the International Rule of Law.
Or, in more precise Australian diplomatic language: ‘GetOutOfItYerBastard’.
Much like donning the Anzac Cloak, invoking the ‘Rule of Law’ is one of those concepts that legitimises everything, up to and including military action. We don’t need, we are told by successive governments, a democratic decision on taking military action, because… the ‘Rule of Law’. In fact, not stuffing suitably-equipped servicepeople on board planes and ships at a moment’s notice to rush to the side of our (happily and coincidentally, always USA since WWII) brethren would be a dereliction of a sacred duty.
Pretty much like failing to have a football game to stagelight the Anzac Spirit on Anzac Day, but with extra munitions – so very much extra munitions – and hordes of dead and wounded collaterals.
It’s a mere detail that the ‘Rule of Law’ does not, in fact, exist per se. It does not even have a formal agreed title; it is just a yumcha train of agreements on offer. Nations pick the bits they like and ignore the bits that don’t appeal. (Perhaps I should not have used that Chinese allusion???)
For example, the USA specifically refuses to accept the International Court of Justice. One might suggest this is pragmatic, since the USA is – who would have thought it? – the prime offender of the rather basic notion that you can’t just invade / bomb the hell out of another country because you feel like it at the time (say, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Grenada et al.).
Or that you might be constrained to respect another country’s democratic government: as Kissinger famously said of Chile under Allende: “I don’t see why we need to stand by and watch a country go Communist due to the irresponsibility of its own people.”
Follow the money – as usual
Of course, it is not just the governments (current and past) that find the ‘Rule of Law’ extremely convenient, though it is the governments who extol the virtue of being the agents of retribution against the declared transgressors of the Rule. All the usual suspects are quietly raking in their tithe (and more) from the crusades.
Godwin’s Rule actually applies to both sides of the same coin: to terminate argument both against and ironically for totalitarian military action (colloquially but not exclusively through pan-nationalism).
It is a damn thin coin.
For politicians, being pro military action (underpinning mind-chilling levels of expenditure on materiel – currently, well in excess of $400BN, I believe) is a win-win situation. Not only do they get to shine brightly as the saviours of our society (‘Won’t Someone Think of the Children.. Farmers.. Parents.. Teachers.. the Elderly, Uncle Tom Cobley and all’) but also they line themselves up for potential future reward. Not that the latter is ever a conscious motive, of course.
Spoiler alert: my first act of democratic participation was to vote in the federal election that bought Gough Whitlam’s Labor government to power. While I have a few times deviated from absolute devotion to Labor, I would mount the steps to the block with Sir Thomas More’s hand on my shoulder in refusal to recant my support of the Whitlam Labor government.
So, it is with deep regret that I say: ‘Conroy, you bastard.’ But it must be said.
https://johnmenadue.com/decoding-bloviation-pat-conroy-and-the-rule-of-war/
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