Saturday, 17 May 2008

MEAN SPIRITS: Wealthy Inner-City Elites Angered By Government Means Testing of Hand-outs // Age Leftard Pays Out on Gillard For Letting Them Down

How pleasing to see the latte left's lerv for Julia Gillard seems to waning. One of their earthy representatives Tracee Hutchison at The Age opines that the DPM is betraying all their hopes and aspirations of what her Kevin07 government could be for high-income inner-city suburbanites like herself. Feel the sense of betrayal:

I can't be the only non-family type of working Australian who thinks it sounds just a little bit odd when an unmarried, childless woman who has been such a proud advocate for choice, circumstance and empty fruit bowls starts singing from the Labor Party's working family songbook. I just don't buy it.

THE KEW BELIEVERS

Tracee (I would add multiple e's in the Tim Blair style but he does it so much better) outlines multiple disappointments: not enough for asylum seekers and refugees, not enough for climate change, not enough for private health care, not enough for solar panels, not enough $4000 baby bonuses for BMW drivers, not enough for climate change, not enough of a clamp-down on plastic bags despite the growing number of those bloody green cloth recycled bags in my drawer. I must be the only person who just accumulates the thing, surely no one else does this. Yeh, right. Oh and did I mention, not enough for climate change. It is quite the catalogue of upper-middle class complaint.

Sarcastically resentful about the governments concern for working families (because she works, is presumably in a family but doesn't feel that the description fits her), she's particularly not happy about the their apparently cruel and heartless decision that those earning over $100,000 a year (call it $2,000 a week) ought not cop a substantial redistribution of income from lower income earners to the tune of $8,000 for the installation of solar panels on the roof of their mansions.

Some seem to imply that $100K pa isn't a high income and for many it doesn't seem that way, spending increasing to the amount available or squeezable within credit limits, but it is actually quite a high salary.

Consider the median salary paid at KPMG ($53,671) or Westpac ($59,557), hardly considered low payers.

Average weekly earnings is about the same $1,123.30 a week.

The chart showing what most Australians are getting here is also very interesting. While seven years old it won't have changed much proportionally. It reminds us of what we already know of course, the level of income most people are on is quite a bit lower than the average.

ARISE YE GHOST OF FINANCE MINISTER PETER WALSH AND SPEAK TRUTHS TO THE POPULACE

Call me old fashioned but I'm not sure where I can find the decency in people who are earning $10 an hour driving cabs subsidising the $12,000 solar panels of someone who earns $50 an hour, owns a house and then enjoys an extra selling point when they sell the thing without any thought to kicking some back to the poor folks who paid for it.

Slopping out money in that way to high income earners is proof that while there was much to admire about the previous government, on many things they completely lost their way, over-run with advisers from Canberra and the elite ranks of the public service. For every rough-head butt-kicking Gerry Wheeler, they had a hundred leftards pretending they weren't.

We can only be thankful that while many in this new government make nice with wealthy lefty latte sippers, when push comes to shove they don't think the government owes them a thing. Thankfully.

It was a government elected in the outer suburbs of our great cities, and in the regions and especially in Queensland. There are different incomes in all sort of places but generally these areas would be the ones benefiting least from middle-class and beyond solar panel subsidies. Hopefully the technology will get cheaper and the interest will rise. But forcing working families to subsidise the passions and the mansions of the elite is very rich indeed. If you really had to dish out money for every cause like that, there'd be a much better case made for lending the money. Then again, can't people just work these things out for themselves without the state breathing down their neck.

To adapt that famous quote, while it's true that you can't strengthen the weak by weakening the strong,  you also cannot help people permanently by doing for them what they can and should do for themselves, including financing their own energy saving home improvements.

Kudos to K-Rudd and DPM for not being captured by the likes of Tracee. Occasionally even the cynical OC can be pleasantly surprised.

Game on.

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FULL RECOVERY: The Age's Caroline Wilson Bounces Back From Footy Show Insult


An MCC Members' patriot informs us that as we type that The Age's Caroline Wilson (better known in political circles as the Spouse de Iron Chef and suspected patriot Brendan Donohue) who today complained loud and proud on our very own version of Pravda's front page about the lame-ass stupid sexualised denigration of her on Nine's Footy Show has fired right back up, presenting as truly jovial and chattily indulging in a restorative drink or three while holding court with several dames of an age in the MCC's Percy Beames Bar.

Pinot is the drink of the day.

Cheers.

Game on.

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A RABBLE: Margaret May Might Mean Well But She's Highlighted The Federal Liberals Have A Long Way To Go

 

The most amazingly successful Liberal politician of our time John Howard told us that "disunity is death in politics". He was a victim of it, and a perpetrator of it, during the Liberal Dark Ages of the 1980s.

But he unified his party in 1995 and it really didn't look back until the introduction of Workchoices nearly a decade later, eating for lunch nation-changing Paul Keating, an impressive Kim Beazley and Labortards Latham and Crean.

MARGARET MAYTARD

The contrast with right now couldn't be greater. Leaving aside poor old Red Dead Ted, the efforts of clueless dozer Gold Coast MP and Shadow Minister for Oldies Margaret May proves the Liberals have a very long way to go.

Her disgraceful botching of the handling of the release of the Coalition's plan to increase aged pensions highlights the lack of co-ordination and political smarts in Brendan Nelson's team.

What's particularly frightening is that she's been in federal Parliament for nearly a decade. She's no newbie. She's just a dumbo.

Dr Nelson is a decent man who is clearly working furiously hard while going nowhere. He sincerely deserves a hell of a lot better than this:

The spokeswoman on ageing, Margaret May, asked whether the Opposition now endorsed an increase in the pension base rate, said "absolutely".

But shadow treasurer Malcolm Turnbull said: "We have not got a policy to raise the base rate of the pension."

There won't be a Liberal in the nation not shaking their head in disgust.

COULD HAVE BEEN GOOD NOW A DEBACLE

The cretin might have been onto something by trying to give something back to the oldies and start building on Coalition strengths with that demographic. She wants to promise them some money and wrongfoot Ruddster on pensions. Not the worst idea in the world. So she announces it, a policy with multi-billion dollar implications, without a single discussion with her Leader, the Shadow Treasurer, the Shadow Cabinet, Party Room, relevant committees of the Parliamentary Party or anyone else. It is beyond belief.

Dr Nelson been searching for a way to look decisive, to look like he's an alternative Prime Minister. Here's a suggestion: Call the old dear on her mobile right now and give her a dose of the Donald Trumps - You're Fired. 

No one that clueless should threaten to become a federal Minister of the Crown.

Game on.

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