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Pearls and Irritations

John Menadue's Public Policy Journal

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June 16, 2022

Julian Schultz searches but does not find ‘the soul of the nation’

When a book called ‘The Idea of Australia: A search for the nation’s soul’ is touted as ‘A brilliant successor to Donald Horne’s ‘The Lucky Country’, and as ‘A triumph of art, politics, literature, history, and the deepest scholarship’, one would expect a truly exciting read that clarifies or refocuses ‘the idea of Australia’.

September 12, 2022

There is more to Sri Lanka than boats and the Rajapaksa family

In the past 15 years, Australians have become used to thinking of Sri Lanka mainly as an island from where boats filled with asylees - and other venturesome folk - seek illegally to reach our shores.

April 7, 2022

Climate change: Scott Morrison's achilles heel

Scott Morrison has a problem with climate change which reflects his style of governing.<!--more-->
He sees it as a political matter to be managed politically, not as an actual problem with the potential to cause severe problems in Australia in the relatively near term.
He does not view climate change as a reality that must be dealt with now and with strong, far-reaching measures. Rather, it is something to be managed by the application of least-perturbation decision making aimed at short-term electoral success.
This leaves him looking like a minimalist and not a leader in the face of a potential climate crisis brought on by rising temperatures, rising sea levels and greater extremes of weather. That Australians accept that climate change is real and problematic is not in doubt, and Morrison’s lagging of their world view has become apparent from public opinion polls. He is behind, following timidly. But he seeks to convince the electorate that he is up to speed with the rest of the world.
Morrison continues with the tired, indeed ludicrous trope that wind and solar generation are flawed when “the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine”: in a big country, with many contrasting weather systems active at the same time, wind always abounds somewhere. Sunshine, meanwhile, is never more than hours away, and cloudiness does not persist indefinitely. The National Electricity Market’s grid covers half the country with a reticulation system connecting generation and consumption over great distances covering transitory weather systems. Moreover, batteries are increasingly being used to store electricity generated by power companies and roof-top solar systems. They provide backstops against lack of wind, cloudiness and night.
Morrison’s incantation of the line that the developing world must do more to reduce its emissions, while seemingly denying that wealthy nations like Australia (its per capita emissions already more than three times the global average) have more capacity for reductions, is deaf to a reality that the electorate has come to understand. We have room for improvement; that is less true of third world countries seeking living standards to match those in the wealthier nations. The problem is global, but the first world must lead in the response ─ which requires leadership from the first world. Australia’s Prime Minister, it seems, will not be part of this leadership.
Morrison has been known to mock climate change, as when he brought a lump of coal to Parliament with the exhortation that MPs not be fearful of it. His government backs dozens of proposals for new or expanded coal mines and gas-extracting initiatives and subsidises them generously, and it harbours climate change deniers and enthusiasts for coal-powered electricity generation who decry the subsidies provided to renewables. It steadfastly ignores organisations, like the New South Wales Independent Planning Commission and the same state’s Land and Environment Court, whose judgements have sought to curtail the further development of fossil fuel extraction.
Morrison’s performance at Glasgow 2021, having dragged his National Party coalition partners to a reluctant acceptance of the goal of ‘net zero by 2050’ (which already looks too little and too late) was embarrassing. He also finds himself increasingly sidelined when companies advise that they will close coal-fired power stations ahead of schedule, and he is wedged by his own rhetoric when a “can-do capitalist” like Mike Cannon-Brookes seeks to buy out such a station (Eraring, on the New South Wales Central Coast) and replace it with renewable generation. He lags behind business as well as public opinion.
The Prime Minister is deaf, too, to the warnings that climate change underlain by increased greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is producing greater extremes of weather and leading to more severe bush fires and floods. This is a complex matter, given the difficulty of measuring impacts accurately and consistently over time. Nevertheless fire seasons are clearly becoming longer in both hemispheres. Worldwide, property losses to wildfires are growing alarmingly.
The Australian problem with floods is born of the legacy of past development on floodplains, going back to the nineteenth century and added to by continuing development in flood-liable locations especially in Brisbane and Sydney. Climate change is an intensifier of the problems of exposure to flooding that we are still creating. This too has been noted in other countries.
As to causation, it is clear and well understood that the atmosphere is warming. Ice sheets and glaciers in both the Arctic and the Antarctic are melting, and a warmer atmosphere can hold more water vapour which is available to be triggered as rain ─ leading to greater concentrations of falls in events of high intensity. The rate of sea level rise is increasing, which cannot do other than intensify coastal flooding and erosion.
None of this is ‘fringe’: it is all well demonstrated empirically. Worse yet, the trends ─ including the trend towards higher concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere ─ have momentum. They are not about to cease or be reversed.
In mid-March, an organisation known as Emergency Leaders for Climate Action (ELCA), comprising a large number of former fire and emergency chiefs from all the Australian states and territories, called a media conference in Brisbane. Widely reported, ELCA excoriated the Morrison government for its tardiness on climate action and its failure to react to forecasts of disastrous fire seasons and severe floods likely exacerbated by climate change.
Morrison, in reply, dismissively called ELCA “misinformed”. Yet he had called for a briefing by Emergency Management Australia and the Bureau of Meteorology that warned his cabinet in November 2021 about the likelihood of severe floods during the summer now past. These floods duly occurred in Queensland and New South Wales.
It looked almost as though the briefing he had sought was in his mind the action needed. He had not connected the warnings he had been given to the emissions contributing to climate change and needing to be radically reduced. To excuse the inaction, he used the fact that nobody involved in the briefing to Cabinet had predicted “one-in-500-year” floods. This was a complete non sequitur.
Morrison’s was the small picture not the big one, the minimalist reaction not one that suggested a recognition of the problem of climate change. In his more than three years as Prime Minister, he has done little to act on the climate change ELCA was concerned about. The same organisation had sought to warn Morrison in advance of the disastrous bush fire season of 2019-20. His response was to ignore ELCA’s entreaties and refuse to meet an ELCA delegation.
The time may be coming when the world insists that the major coal-producing nations, of which Australia is one, steadily reduce the amount of coal they mine and gradually phase it out as a significant element in power generation and industry. The world could require, on pain of sanctions and carbon tariffs at borders, verifiable targets to be set and met. Bold, hard government decisions would be needed, but they are too hard, too long-term, and too far beyond the electoral cycle for Morrison to deem them worthy of his attention. Indeed, his government seems to be encouraging as much mining of our coal as possible before international pressure makes it problematic.
Morrison ignores the public, business leaders, scientific experts and emergency managers. He and his government do not take climate change seriously. Now he is about to face an electorate which ‘gets’ the big picture. Is this his Achilles heel?
Chas Keys is a former academic and emergency management practitioner who was the Deputy Director General of the New South Wales State Emergency Service from 1997 to 2004. He is a member of Emergency Leaders for Climate Action.
April 6, 2021

Humans unite: We badly need more than gestures

Dave Sharma’s token gesture on International Women’s Day, handing out single pink dahlias to female commuters, reminded me of my days in Moscow.

September 4, 2022

Caitlin Johnstone: It's gross to live under the US empire and spend your time criticising Russia and China

The other day an Australian journalist was giving me a hard time for not criticising Russia and China the way I go after the US empire, calling me “morally bankrupt” for not criticising all governments equally. He said the ethical thing to do would be to criticise the US, but also criticise the governments the US doesn’t like for balance.

June 15, 2022

The immoral army

One of the regular refrains from the Israeli government is that they have “the most moral army” on Earth.

January 18, 2019

JOHN MENADUE. The myth that Liberals are better economic managers. A repost from 25 July 2018

Malcolm Turnbull has made it clear that his mantra of ‘Jobs-and-Growth’ will be at the forefront of his campaign in the next election. This week he will be talking about the growth of a million jobs in 5 years, but there is nothing really remarkable in that on average over the last 15 years about 200,000 new jobs have been created each year. Further, it is less impressive because our population is growing by about two million every five years. 

June 12, 2022

Hannon: A Tribute to Father Eric Hodgens – friend, pastor, priest

In my distant memory, when in 1960, I was a grade 2 student at St James’s Primary School in Gardenvale, I have a vague recollection of a newly ordained priest coming to visit the school and talk to us. I also have a similar recollection from 1959, in Grade 2, when Michael Parer likewise had come back to his old parish. The first mentioned must have been Eric Hodgens, although I couldn’t remember his name that far back. At the time, Paul Willy, of YCW fame, was the parish curate, and much later Brighton postman! I certainly can remember his friendly and engaging nature, coming to talk to us, and giving me a kick of the footy at Elsternwick oval, as I had no interest in violent engagement of contact sport, being one of the smallest in the class!

September 14, 2022

Labor must pro-actively manage potential conflicts of interest

The Liberal Party’s attack on the Attorney-General, Mark Dreyfus, over an alleged conflict of interest in his share ownership was an unimpressive flop. It did not establish a case that Dreyfus had failed to meet the technical standard of disclosure of interests set by the prime minister – a standard far higher than that set down by any prime minister before. It also failed to make any case that conflict of interest was involved, by any other standard, including the pub test.

June 9, 2022

Desperate Premiers call for radical redesign for health care funding

Australian hospitals are finding it increasingly difficult to meet legitimate, often critical demands for in-patient care. The money to do so is not there and staff shortages are critical. A combination of professional dissatisfaction re the standard of care they are able to deliver, has many health professionals deserting our public hospital system. Add in staff absences as a result of our pandemic and a severe Influenza season and we have the ‘perfect storm’ lashing our hospitals.

April 30, 2022

Stalemate at Stormont - elections for the Northern Ireland Assembly

_The elections for the Northern Ireland Assembly, scheduled for 5 May 2022, may be the most important in the Assembly’s history. Yet, they will resolve nothing. Instead, they will set the parameters for what will happen next in this troubled land. And the prospects are not encouraging.

June 16, 2022

Not a ‘windfall’ more a ‘guided weapon’

In his Farewell Address, 17 January 1961, stepping aside as the US President, ex-General Eisenhower warned his nation.

May 23, 2022

The deeper issues behind the repeated failure of our nation’s critical service delivery

With the recent floods devastating communities across Queensland and New South Wales and government responses criticised as being ill-timed and inadequate, now is the time to scrutinise the deeper issues behind the repeated failure of our nation’s critical service delivery systems in relation to planning for, responding to and navigating beyond crises.

September 28, 2018

GRATTAN INSTITUTE Who’s in the room? Access and influence in Australian politics.

Many business sectors depend heavily on government favours and regulations. They include miners,property developers,road contractors,liquor and gambling industries. Not surprisingly they are the largest political donors who seek favourable government approvals.

April 4, 2018

LAURIE PATTON: No balls. How Cricket Australia lost the media game

The on-field actions of a player created a crisis for Cricket Australia. However, its own mishandling of the affair – especially in its dealing with the media – added to an unfolding debacle. For years to come, world travel for Australians will involve tolerating jokes, and worse, about being from a nation of cheats.

November 1, 2020

Angelique Chan. Asian countries do aged care differently. Here’s what we can learn from them (The Conversation Oct 23, 2020)

Unlike in Western countries like Australia, traditional Asian cultures place a heavy emphasis on filial piety — the expectation children will support their parents in old age.

August 14, 2022

The Summertime of Our Dreams

P&I 220807 :The interviewer interviewed: what really counts.

August 2, 2020

Defusing the Population Bomb: a Response to Paul Collins

Paul Collins’s alarm about the environmental challenges facing the planet leads him to overlook the refugee issue I wrote about (“Prospects for Refugees and Migrants if Population Bomb goes Bust”, 23/7/2020), and line me up with all those he opposes: who think the world needs more people, or “more of the same” economic growth, or who don’t care about climate change or the ongoing loss of species.

June 17, 2022

US hysterics over a Cambodian naval pier

The Chinese navy will struggle to threaten the region or launch a war from a tiny pier earmarked for upgrade at the Ream Naval Base.

September 12, 2022

Royal Commission into veteran suicide

The Royal Commission (RC) into veterans’ suicide has made good progress with much worthwhile information. Yet the process is very extensive and the report does not indicate the eventual breadth of consideration. Veteran blogs have cynically dismissed it as a waste of time. But while it was no doubt a stunt by Scott Morrison, and it ploughs much old ground, there is some merit in what the interim report says.

February 22, 2021

What Rupert wants, Scotty gives

_My public posts are now unavailable on Facebook because the dopey Morrison Government chose to charge Facebook for linking to media websites.

October 18, 2020

Japan’s New Leader, Suga Yoshihide, Will Maintain the Old Regime (Jacobin Sep 27, 2020)

Suga Yoshihide, longtime aide to Abe Shinzo, has now replaced him as Japan’s prime minister. Suga will preserve the main features of Abe’s long stint in power: creeping militarism, subordination to the US, and a high-handed approach to political opposition.

September 12, 2022

COVID-19: China’s death toll puts US to shame but the western centric media tell a different story

The public health measures that have worked so well in China should not be lightly dismissed.

June 24, 2021

Here’s what will happen in Hong Kong in 2047

It is becoming increasingly clear what will happen to Hong Kong’s economic and legal foundations at midnight on June 30th, 2047, when the transition period to being part of China comes to an end. Nothing.

April 18, 2022

Where are the peacemakers to end the war in Ukraine? ( A repost from 22 March 2022)

_We used to have globally respected statesmen, including people like Nelson Mandela, Kofi Annan and Desmond Tutu. Many of them were members of a council of “The Elders” which has tried to provide calm and sensible advice from time to time. Clearly, we seem to lack such distinguished statesmen today.

March 6, 2020

RICHARD MCGREGOR.-China and Japan: Facing History By Ezra F. Vogel Belknap Press, 2019(Global Asia Book Review)

_A strategic China would have seduced Japan as a way of undermining US power in Asia. Their failure to do so in all likelihood means that the US is in East Asia to stay, no matter what.

July 19, 2020

The militarised centre of Australia

I can remember the naive excitement with which I ventured up the Stuart Highway for the first time more than thirty years ago. Now I feel the weight of the creeping expansion of a militarised swathe running south to north right through the centre of Australia.

June 10, 2022

Dear times and costly cricket: Australia’s Sri Lankan Tour

For a country experiencing its worst economic crisis since gaining independence in 1948, the picture of a touring team pampered and fussed over might cause consternation. But the Australian cricket tour to Sri Lanka has only been met by praise from the country’s cricket officials, where logic is inverted, and the gaze of responsibility averted. Not even a shortage of foreign currency, precipitating a dramatic fall in medicines and fuel, along with demonstrations that have left nine dead and 300 injured, prompted second thoughts.

September 3, 2022

China’s challenges: a naive Australian’s perspective

I visited China a few times in the years before Covid. In Hainan, I rode my bike past streets of empty high rise apartment buildings. In Tianjin I visited a near empty new financial district. Locals I spoke to talked about the ‘ghost cities’ of empty buildings. I observed conflicting rules for different parts of the economy.

February 3, 2020

JERRY ROBERTS. Dangerous banking and religious legislation should be discarded.

Doctors are obliged to warn patients about the risks of surgery before wheeling them into the operating theatre. When the surgery is cosmetic and unnecessary the risks should be weighed even more carefully. Politicians should exercise similar caution with unnecessary, high-risk legislation.

April 24, 2022

None of us is safe until all of us are safe: Australia and global vaccine equity

Ending COVID public health restrictions reflects community sentiment. People are tired of COVID and want to move on. But the only way to protect our own citizens is to protect other countries.

September 27, 2018

GRATTAN INSTITUTE. Special deals for special interests. Packer’s casino licence

How rent seekers and lobbyists work  - The Casino Licence

 In February 2012, James Packer proposed building a hotel-casino on the Sydney Harbour foreshore at Barangaroo. The NSW premier and opposition leader were quick to back the idea, saying it would bring jobs and tourists to Sydney. Both major parties ignored the public interest.

June 3, 2022

Australians reject Trumpism

We do need to pay attention to the cold reality that Australia came the closest it has been since federation to closing the door on a democratic future worthy of the name. With the defeat of Morrison Australia has dodged the abyss of Trumpism.

August 23, 2022

The stench of Morrison’s dormant constitutional coup

The great unravelling of Scott Morrison’s pseudo-constitutional coup deserves a comprehensive inquiry. Perhaps a royal commission. It’s a commission that could also embrace other improper, illegal or general style of secretive unaccountable government, and also take in the connivance, or learned ignorance of other ministers and senior bureaucrats.

January 25, 2019

DEAN BAKER. The Green New Deal is happening in China.

One of the Trump administration’s talking points about global warming is that we’re reducing greenhouse gas emissions, while the countries that remain in the Paris accord are not. Well, the first part of this story is clearly not true, as data for 2018  show a large rise in emissions for the United States. The second part is also not very accurate, as most other countries are taking large steps to reduce emissions. At the top of the list is China. The country has undertaken a massive push to convert to electric powered vehicles and clean energy sources. 

July 4, 2022

The brutality of “Bulldozer Justice” in India

It looks all too eerily similar as a method: the expulsion of individuals from their home, the demolition of said home and the punishing of entire families. All excused by a harsh reading of local regulations. But this method, used by Israeli authorities for years against vulnerable Palestinians, has become a weapon of choice for the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Gujarat.

September 19, 2022

A public postal bank is a win-win solution for Australia’s economy and people

A public forum in Parliament House on 7 September demonstrated the growing political appetite in Australia for a national post office bank that can serve communities and force the Big Four banks to compete.

August 22, 2022

Sarah Raymundo: Why the US pivot to Asia means war for Filipinos

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in the Philippines to meet the newly elected President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. just as the Rim of the Pacific exercise, or RIMPAC, ends. As the world’s largest maritime military exercises, RIMPAC has intensified the militarisation of the Asia-Pacific region since 1971 and has further strengthened the alignment of the newly-minted Marcos Jr. regime with U.S. military interests.

September 3, 2022

The parlous state of consumer protection from health care fraud

Revelations of the incredible harm done to many Australians undergoing cosmetic surgery, performed by doctors lacking the skills to perform such operations, have been literally shocking. Surely regulations exist to insure the surgical competence of those offering such operations? Not so!

October 18, 2020

Asian voice: Wang Gungwu (East Asia Forum Oct 9, 2020)

Against the backdrop of the  current tension between China and the United States, Wang Gungwu’s contribution to mutual understanding between East and West is more essential now than ever.

September 17, 2022

Caitlin Johnstone: Ukraine crawling with CIA & Co

The previously unthinkable idea that the U.S. is at war with Russia has been gradually normalised, with the heat turned up so slowly that the frog doesn’t notice it’s being boiled alive.

July 2, 2022

Independence day postponed, again

If Australians thought a new government would independently seek better relations with our regional neighbours, the Albanese team is already giving us reasons to be disappointed.

August 20, 2022

How to produce competent general practitioners…faster

Father and daughter general practitioners, Dr William Howson and Dr Anna Howson, work in the same group practice in Wonthaggi, Victoria. They’re acutely aware of the GP workforce crisis and have thought about ways to address this. Katrina Watson caught up with the family in their natural habitat.

September 11, 2022

Entrenched political polarisation in America

Has the Republican Party gone completely rogue and is the American experiment beyond repair?

February 3, 2020

HENRY BATEMAN. What are they Thinking?

While not wishing to mitigate the horror of our current bushfires, they do present an opportunity to re-engineer our electrical system with a similar experience to the one Wi-Fi brought to telephony.

March 1, 2019

DAVID HUTT, PHNOM PENH. Vietnam’s new view of an old war (Asia Times).

Hanoi marked the 40th anniversary of its bloody 1979 border war with China with unprecedented candor, a revisionist reflection of declining contemporary ties

March 19, 2018

ERIC SIDOTI. What if anything Corbyn can teach the ALP?

Populism is rapidly evolving as the catch-all explanation for the maelstrom engulfing national and international politics. It is said to be driving the rise of the authoritarian right in Europe and to be evident in the re-emergence of ‘strong man’ politics associated with Putin’s Russia, Xi Jinping’s China and Duterte’s Philippines. While Trump appears to be riding a populist wave all his own, it is also proferred as the key to understanding Bernie Sanders’ and Jeremy Corbyn’s surprising successes. The recourse to populism as the answer risks blinding us to the complex realities. It risks obscuring the more meaningful lessons that would better serve the sort of reform-minded social democratic movement that we might like to think the Australian Labor Party could be.

August 28, 2022

President Xi signals that governance in Hong Kong must be more mindful of people's expectations

Clear signs are emerging that Hong Kong’s essential “social contract” is undergoing renovation. Moreover, this process looks set to continue. Before examining why this is so, we need to consider the meaning of this expression.

May 1, 2022

Peter Tait: Vote Independent? If that doesn't work, then what?

Voting independent needs careful preferencing. If your independent doesn’t get up (or you don’t have that option), you can try Active Democracy

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