Tags
Australia, CO2, Fed3eration, handpiece, maritime, Queensland, shearing, sheep

Having experienced the last few decades living in Australia and overseas one can form an opinion of what some of the differences were.. One difference that sticks out is our love of staying put, resist change. Australia is many things but it will never get accused of being at forefront of progress, rearing to try out new things, seek change, make things work better. It is true that we do advance in certain areas but often behind many others having done and proven it first. We are somewhat scared of testing the water.
It doesn’t matter what is proposed, our immediate reaction are howls of protests and rejection no matter what the merit, no matter what the proposal. It is part of who we are; fear of change is deeply embedded in our national psyche, none more so than with the latest outcry and the political tsunamis over the proposal to charge for CO2 emissions.
It started with Federation, a bit before my time, when Australia would only consider a form of unity away from Britain, if independence was promised to each state. Australia today is a federation of States whereby each state still has many of its own laws and regulation differentiating from each other. Commit a crime and you still have to be extradited from the state where one has escaped to. As is still the norm today, Queensland then did not want to change too rapidly and become part of Federation, preferred to remain a British colony for a while longer. The struggle for Federation went on for a number of years. Even though Australia finally became ‘Australia’, it still took another 26 years for the Australian parliament to meet and hold its first sitting in its own Parliament building in Canberra 1927.
http://www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/federation.htm
We now jump over the next sixty years or so to the next hurdle, the acceptance of a decimal system. My god, this was heresy. What? Change from our beloved Pound of Twenty shillings and one shilling containing 12 pennies to a foreign currency? The sixpence, the Zac and Bob, the quid, the guinea, give all that up? Even then, we could not bring ourselves to giving this new decimal currency an Australian name; (austral, merino and royal.) preferred instead the Yankee Doodle name of “Dollar.” It felt safer and the US was our protector.
Then, in the 1980’s Australia was struck down by the wider-comb sheep shearing equipment dispute. It occupied the Arbitration Commission for over four years. It was a fight to the death between the National Farmers Federation with new ideas of how Australian society should be organized and The Australian Workers Union… Shearing sheds were subject to arson, burnt to the ground amongst shouts of ‘scabs and mongrels’. Even worse was that the wider combs had been introduced by New Zealand. The indignity of it all was all too much. It was however a huge shift into modernity in its final acceptance of the wider and more economical shearing hand-piece from a traditional staid rural society. The sheep kept their calm through-out.
http://www.shearingworld.com/Information/widecombs2.htm
The next bit of progress to oppose was the containerization of our wharves. Boy oh boy, I remember it well. This was going to be the death knell of all employment on the wharves. The picket lines were stretched between Darling Harbour and Botany Bay. Stevedoring was finished, doom and gloom would spread and we would all end up queuing at soup kitchens. It didn’t matter that containerization had been effectively introduced in many countries. It did not matter what took a month to turn around in Darling Harbour took a day around the wharves in Rotterdam. By hook and by crook, this progress had to be stopped in the bud. It took many legal battles and endless compensations to the workers and their unions to finally get it accepted. Harold Holt called the whole lot ‘red commies’.
The latest revolution to jar our conscience to an extreme edginess is the proposal to introduce carbon trading or taxing. It’s on par with having similar percentages of pro and against as that old smelly herring of becoming a ‘republic’. Having our own head of state just doesn’t seem to cut it here.
The primitive fear of change is well known by savvy politicians and exploited to the maximum by all parties. The ‘children overboard’ resplendent with ’armadas and hordes’ of boat people would invade our shores, corrupt Australia with foreign gangs raping our mothers and daughters and ripping off our generous welfare to boot. It is almost daily fare in our media.
With taxing carbon polluters, fear against change is again being exploited. “We all have to pay and become poorer”. “We are being led by lying Prime ministers”. “It will cause massive unemployment”. “The climate is not changing”. “The big miners will take our resources and go overseas”.”Industry will go overseas”. Our harvests will fail. Kids will run amok.
Nothing is surer that we will finally end up with some kind of carbon trading or carbon taxing but not before we have steadfastly refusedto accept it as much and as long as possible. We’ll object, protest, linger and point finger. Our beloved motto, ‘don’t fix if it isn’t broke’ will raise its ugly head again and again. “It’s all the fault of leftist latte sippers”. Kicking and screaming we will finally get it. In the meantime the world has moved forward again. Again we will waste years, battle on and play catch-up.
This is Australia.
I saw a lost and lonely shopping trolley that some bodgie had managed to lift over a no-parking sign whereby the open flap at the back of the trolley was used to get it past the sign at the top of the pole.
They freed the trolley by cutting the parking sign. Who thinks those sort of pranks up? Perhaps next they will ram a parking sign up a shopper bending down to pick up their 4 cents petrol discount voucher..
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Privacy issues are very dear to us, yet I was shocked by what I witnessed the other day at a police station. I was there to pick up my lost purse, all in tact, money and the cards, so no problem there.
A young man came in querying about his court date, he looked like minor or mini criminal.
In front of us, a very loud receptionist rattled all his crimes for us all to hear , no privacy for this poor lost boy. I felt like complaining to someone higher up, I felt sorry for him…
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You get a bit of that in Doctors’ surgeries too. Awful though, just awful.
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Viv, Tutu works in a surgery and she says that some people just won’t take no for an answer so the reply may come, “Yes Mrs So and So your HIV result is…….”
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Surgeries are all different of course. We are lucky to have had a doctor in our local village (direct bills) – he has a small set up and the waiting area is all within spitting distance of the reception and we can hear all phone conversations. But they are a funny lot and I think many know each other’s ailments anyway. The receptionist is the doc’s wife and her assistant also works in the newsagent/take-away. Totally different to the medical centre in town (five storey building with the works).
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Confidentiality is an art form for sure
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H, when you go to court, they call your name and then read out the first words you said to the police when arrested, very colourful indeed, all and sundry get to hear what you said 🙂
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Australia and America are the only countries arguing about whether climate change/AGW is real or not. It is an accepted fact everywhere else.
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Oops, I’ve only just noticed this. I’ve posted something on The Dot that appears, on 1st reading, to belong here.
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Trying hard to see how you using Paco Rabanne relates to a group of people moving forward kicking and screaming. 🙂
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Voice , are you being deliberat……………Oh I see you ARE.
Any way, moving forward let me just say that one of the major Banksters, Westpick(your pocket or two), have declared that they are against The SEE Tax.
I’d like to propose that we all shuddup and die gracefully.
I don’t want to hear about it any more (or morte).
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Of course I am. It’s me.
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Who do you think you are? Warrigal?
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Now to my trivial concerns:
Why, or why do I have to sign in when I want to have a cheap lunch at a local club…?
What is this nonsense about having a Justice of Peace signing certain documents; he does not know me from a bar soap…or chocolate?
Why do you all insist that the Westminster system is the best way of governing; you never get any good policies through when it is the’job’ of the opposition to oppose and to block everything.
Why does our ABC thinks we need rubbish like Donnelly, I don’t think BBC would publish anything like that, why did they need Bolt on the Insiders?
Better stop and go for cover …
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If the JP doesn’t know you he should ask to see our driver’s licence and then attest that it is you who is signing the document.
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That club rule has been around for a long time, I think you have to prove you have travelled so many kms to have lunch therefore you can be the guest of the club, I think
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Just a little while ago – Joe Hockey on ABC news commenting on what Julia said. Joe “now is not the time”, “now is not the time”. For them, it is never time (unless it is their idea). We have so much hypocrisy on one side of politics (the Libs I am sorry to say – haven’t been Liberal for two decades), I just wonder how further they can go on this tack because they soon will be biting their own bums.
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Let’s not get into how lockable shopping trolleys were introduced by Aldi some twenty years ago in many European countries when at the same time plastic shopping bags were banned.
I spoke to a WW executive why not have the same trolley system with small deposits paid in order to avoid trolleys being left across suburban wastelands.
He answered that the ‘Euro system’ was not as profitable. The same with plastic bags. Nothing must stand in the way of ‘free market’.
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Aldi here has lockable trolleys. Couple of other supermarkets do too.
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At my local supermarket, lockable trolleys have come and gone.
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Viv, Aldi is a German company, that’s why.
At Woolies and at Coles we are paying for those lost trolleys.
Aldi also doesn’t give you any plastic bags. Target charges for them too. I always take my own to any shop.
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I know Helvi. I think it is Coles in Wodonga who have lockable ones. I have no idea why some do and some don’t.
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I don’t believe you Vivienne.
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Viv, you are right the Coles here too has the lockable trolleys, and also their cheaper version , whatever it is, go-lo or is ir buy-lo, has them.
Coles in Goulburn was very big and modern, the one in Bowral is shappy so we do not use it much; for us it’s Woolies, Aldi and Harris markets.
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Whatever you do don’t mention the war 🙂
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Geez you are a funny bugger Aldi Choc – what do you mean by you don’t believe me.
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I just don’t think that there is a place called Wodonga 😉
I mean, there just couldn’t be.
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Ah, thanks – of course there is. Also a Burrumbuttock, Tamgambalamba, Gerogery, Walla Walla, Yackandandah, Tallangatta, Thurgoona, Howlong – there’s more !!
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Manangatang
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Little Wallop.
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Innaloo
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Pratts Bottom: outskirts of London.
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I spent a few weeks working just near Pratts Bottom once.
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Was it windy?
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Burrumbuttock….might be worse!!!
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Blew a gale. Stank a bit too..
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The only thing that stays constant is the assurance that things will change.
Countries invariable move through phases of development, from primary to secondary to tertiary industries, with most really developed countries continuing to dabble in ’boutique’ primary and secondary industries, but the bulk of GDP from tertiary. Australia continues to hang onto the century old notion that ‘Australia rides on the sheep’s back’. Sure, we’re in the middle of a mineral boom, but it is just that, a boom. Can’t last forever, got to keep moving on, finding, or making new industries. We’ve got some really clever people here, but we don’t seem to support them.
As for those boat people, we’ve happily let kiwis come over here for a holiday on the Australian dole for decades, yet we can’t accommodate people who have been effectively ship-wrecked on our shores??
Perhaps the Pigs Arms is a good example of people who can adapt to change. It’s full of artists turned farmers turned writers, ag scientist turned IT expert turned writer, troubadors, poets, and a gaggle of male nurses!
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A gaggle? Perhaps a shift?
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A gaggle, like a buch of geese!
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bunch
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Buch is alright. It means book in German.
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Yes, it’s extraordinary.
The pigs arms is a refuge for the progressives and caring male nurses, not shying away from the severely in -continental or the flamboyant constapationalistic.
Really remarkable.
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A murder of nurses, is the correct phrase. And a Dyke of Oostermans.
..A pulchritude of Poms!
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I thought it was a murder of crows
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OK, a herd of nurses.
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..A pulchritude of Poms! bwahahahaha, had to look it up but can’t stop laughing 🙂
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Gez, I am wondering what’s missing…….
I think the missing catalyst could well be trust.
When we have a finely-divided political system; where there is nothing to differentiate the two major political parties except the relative depths of the insanity of their leaders, the string-pullers and bagmen, there seems to be little prospect of forward motion, but an infinite capacity to rush headlong into the past.
We don’t trust any of them – so they almost never get total control. Labor in Federal Government – Liberals in State and vice versa. Control of the lower houses, but the electorate prefers to not also give the government control of the upper houses – remembering what happened when Howard managed to ram through work choices.
Many – including the less well informed also do not trust the experts bearing messages they’d rather not hear.
Finally, when a quid in the hand is more important than doing what’s right for the future, movement in any direction is always going to be difficult. Along with the sense of community disappearing goes the sense of responsibility of the individual to that community.
Now….. time to eat the dog…..
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I had a very interesting conversation with our social worker, at work, just before the last Federal election. What had really struck both of us was the overwhelming attitude of individuals voting for the party that will best serve that individual’s hip pocket. No more, no less. No social conscience. No concern for the poor (it’s their own fault), the homeless (ditto), the insane (too scary), boat people (f*&^ing queue jumpers), and so on.
Most of us earn enough, live in better houses and suburbs than most of the world, and have a safety net in case we fall on hard times, yet most aren’t satisfied, always wanting more from the gummint!
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I never thought that state governments and federal governments could be so opposite each other. Of course, at state erections, people vote on local issues and on a federal more on nation wide things. Even so, I have trouble why people would so easily change their alliances. On a state level, no matter what, stagnation is rampant. We haven’t introduced deposits on glass bottles.
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Of course, at state erections, people vote on local issues and on a federal more on nation wide things.
Cripes! That’s a bit stiff gerry.
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Different boundaries for seats for starters.
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Vectis, you should know Gerard by now, his use of ‘erections’ instead of ‘elections is no MISTAKE 🙂
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Well he’s in dangerous territory; trying to be funny 🙂
You don’t want to see Emmjay and me walking the streets with a begging bowl 😉 😉
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Gez, SA has had container deposit legislation since I moved here in the early eighties. A local phrase was a six pack of echoes as that’s what the bottles were referred to as you brought the beer but leased the bottle. When finished you got your deposit back. Recently it has been increased from 5c to 10c and there are a certain type of person that can make a living by collecting and returning bottles. The bottles in those days were cleaned and refilled however now they are melted down and remoulded.
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Victoria has deposits on soft drink bottles and wine flagons when I grew up there in the 50s and 60s. We kept all the empty beer bottles stacked against the fence ’til the bottle-o came to collect them for 6 pennies a dozen. Why and when they stopped doing that I don’t know. Everything was recycled. We’ve gone backwards.
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A simple method that was in place a couple of decades ago was supermarkets and grocery stores having a glass-return machine. You put all your empty glassware, bottles etc (including jam jars) into this machine, which by reading a bar code on the glass containers would give you a credit ticket to the total value of the returned glassware. This ticket of credit would then be used towards your shopping bill.
It wasn’t here though.( Holland.)
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Who cares Gez, as long as we win the cricket 🙂
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Take this back and do it again. This time properly. Stay in until it’s finished.
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Yes Mr Jones
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Yes, by all means.’win the cricket’. As long as they don’t try and assassinate me while walking Milo. Here in Bowral they can bat for miles. Talk about border.
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Plastic bags have now been banned at supermarkets so we all have to take our own. Supposed to be good for the planet.
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Then there’s our poor showing with those independent states.
We’ve got less than ten, while Europe has over fifty.
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Yes, but they all have a distinct difference, different culture.
Does the cucumber sandwich in Queensland differ much from the one in WA?
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What?! Refuse to match Europe just because of some differences between the situation here and there? Whatever happened to progress? I’m disappointed gerard.
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They’d be West Australian cucumbers grown by West Australians. None of that eastern state muck here.
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I just know that I’m wasting my time, but shouldn’t the cucumbers be up there with gerry’s post about state erections?
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We like New South Welshman as they aren’t from Melbourne 🙂
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No doubt about it, we are slow.
While we were taking 26 years to change our system of government, Poland, The Netherlands, France, etc, etc. managed to do it practically overnight, with the assistance of Germany.
And Europe is so far ahead of us in the green stakes. We STILL haven’t got a nuclear energy reactor, as so many countries there got decades ago.
In fact, it’s time we rid our language of the reactionary word ‘change’ altogether. After all, we have the word ‘reform’, which really makes it redundant. By keeping it, it’s almost as if we were implying that change and progress were not synonymous.
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Don’t forget solar power, wind power and that carbon trading started in many of those Euro-centric countries some many years ago.
None of them have higher CO2 emissions than here. Apart from that they haven’t as yet cottoned on with leaders hell bent on cutting slabs of steaks, wearing tight cycle pants, opposing humane treatment for boat people, and rebuking artists on photograps of nudity.
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None of them have higher CO2 emissions than here….?
There’s only 20 million of us. That’s two big towns in Europe!
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Yeah, London and Paris
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We are the biggest by far per capita. We were not shy in that department.
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That sort of statistic is meaningless. If one pairs it down even further, one could say that a certain tribe in the Andes is the most frugal, or the least polluting.
It won’t help the planet. It should be by regions, because that’s where the problem is. Even if we became carbon neutral in 5 years, it wouldn’t have any effect on planet pollution. …Unfortunately we don’t count.
The only positive contribution we could possibly make is to cease mining all coal henceforth, Full Stop
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Pares I think?
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An interesting take on our history. I think it was WA (not Qld) which held out the longest on the matter of Federation. Menzies wanted to call it the Royal and fortunately a lot of people thought that was bloody awful. Merino is not an Australian word and who would want to name their currency after a sheep? ‘If it ain’t broke don’t fix it” was never a popular motto until we began discussing the idea of a republic – blame the monarchists here for that bit of crap. Containerisation took off around parts of the world in 1970 – the battle against as relatively short.
I look forward to reading further comments.
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Monarchists claim a monarchy works better. That might be so. We either then make someone a monarch or go for a republic. It is inevitable that Australia will ‘eventually’ choose its own head of state. But it will be dragged on for years yet.
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Malcolm the republican, for king I say. Yay.
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West Australians only signed on with the promise of a railway. They still think they’re a difference country.
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Most millionaire per head of population, are you sure Mrs Algernon isn’t secretly rich? 🙂
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No but we think the dragon lady is.
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