@mremedy said:
@Cultured Bogan said:
@magpiecol said:
@guyofthetiger said:
Hard to tell with Bishop. She has manufactured a competent image in her current role. But she always seemed to have a petty, nasty underbelly, not too dissimilar to Abbott really. And who knows what she believes policy-wise.
On the other hand, the inventor of the Internet has lost a lot of credibility, limply backing Abbott's lies. Many labour voters might have swung his way months ago, but perhaps not as many now.
If Labour had to go because it lost credibility, when it had at least managed numerous significant policy and legislative achievements, then this bunch of halfwits, who don't look like ever doing anything positive for the country, definitely need to be moved on - the lot of them.
Have you checked out our countries debt?
When I read comments like yours ( you have your opinions and you are entitled to them and I respect that ) my head feels like it is going to explode.
Labour was kicked out big time for a reason and nothing seems to have changed with them. No return for the foreseeable future unless you want to end up like Greece.
Alan Jones returned from leave has he Col? This government has lurched from crisis to crisis. Attacked healthcare, education and the ABC after promising not to (remember, this was the guy who promised transparency and harped to the masses about the lies that the Gillard government rolled out in regard to the carbon tax,) **instituted corporate welfare by scrapping the mining and carbon taxes** and then expects low and middle class Australia to make up the deficit. He is an embarrassment as a leader and he and his party lack any vision to dream up effective policy, and are too gutless to stand by their policies that are on the nose with the electorate.
If you seriously think this government has done anything other than redistribute wealth to the corporate world at the expense of the average taxpayer and the institutions (i.e. public healthcare and regulated higher education,) that make this country what it is, to paraphrase yourself, you're dipping into the kool-aid.
Cultured Bogan, I'm interested to know what you define as welfare? I have a soft definition of welfare as a transfer payment from productive to non-productive pursuits. In your statement above you seem to define welfare as a reduction in tax. Does this mean that any government that reduces taxes is instituting welfare?
Your post also seems to indicate that you are in favour of welfare to individuals but not in favour to welfare to corporations. Why is that?
A good question…
One is an object of the state - or the globe in the case of multinationals - while individuals are subjects of the state,.
As such, individuals benefit from the social contract implicit to citizenship. In exchange for foregoing certain freedoms (e.g., murder, theft etc), they receive protections from the state, such as a welfare safety net in the case of social democratic nations like ours.
This safety net may justify welfare to corporations where it protects citizens from hardships deemed unacceptable by general consensus, such as homelessness or unemployment (e.g., financial support to motor industry, or farmers facing drought). On this basis, it does not justify fuel subsidies to mining magnates, adding to their megaprofits, for which they pay minimal tax, as much as they might threaten to take their business elsewhere (unlikely because of the protections they receive from the state here compared to developing nations).
Neoliberal free market ideology has attempted to convince the planet that corporations are also subjects, deserving of the same rights as citizens, as if they are capable of self regulation (e.g., empathy, having a moral compass, and being capable of putting ethics and community welfare before profits), while also demanding less rules and regulations to govern their behaviour.
They like to decry the nanny state, as they attempt to undermine the social contract, and citizens' protections.
Social democratic states recognise limits to the free market, such that government regulations are required to embody the self regulation corporations are generally not capable of.
Australia, as with most US allies, is at a crossroads in terms of holding on to this latter form of democracy that protects citizens from the type of corporate sociopaths that have run riot this past 30 years, culminating in the GFC.
Corporations are not people and have even less ties and obligations to the local community, apart from financial need, so why should they be even less regulated than the general population?
Might as well let coal barons do whatever they please to the barrier reef.
Oh yeah right we did that already.