- Feb 5, 2020
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Still pushing nuclear ? Double down on a sh$t policy that was badly costed and had an unrealistic timeline to implement. They are not learning anything.
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spot on. grow some and stand up to those who see more culture wars as the way forward. it will take fortitude bc the rwnj’s have the newscoprse megaphone.
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Adam Schwarz (@adamjschwarz.bsky.social)
Moderates can never suppress the far-right by adopting their policies because the far-right will forever shift their policies to whatever outflanks moderates. All it achieves is legitimising far-right narratives, artificially shifting policy rightwards & facilitating radicalisation towards fascism.bsky.app
Still pushing nuclear ? Double down on a sh$t policy that was badly costed and had an unrealistic timeline to implement. They are not learning anything.
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like father, like son. another lib spruiker. always get a kick out of these shouting at the moon nuffies.
like father, like son. another lib spruiker. always get a kick out of these shouting at the moon nuffies.
And one could be forgiven for wondering if LibLab might suddenly find way too much amount of common ground there, to the electorate’s detriment.So while FPTP would benefit Liberals somewhat a lot of voters who vote tactically (like Greens first then ALP) would switch to ALP first preference to ensure Liberals don’t win. The overall effect would be to diminish the minor and independent vote.
I think that's exactly what many Nats politicians want to do.The Libs are cooked internally, but the Nats also need to change and give them a lot more room to manouevre unless they want to collect their salaries from opposition indefinitely.
Ohhh so cut out mining and it works?I was talking about farmers in rural towns behind meat and grain farming (which contributes less to our economy than Tourism or Education) not mining, who's workforce is mostly FIFO and lives in cities.
In a democratic sense it's one vote one value, rural people's vote is not worth more than city people. You know one of the greatest days in Australian history was November 24th 2021 when the WA Parliament finally abolished the final disproportionally weighted legislature in the country, the WA Upper House, which ridiculously gave rural electors up to 6 times the voting power of city voters?
We could change lots of things with how we vote to make it more "appropriate". IMO the right to vote or compulsory voting should be abolished for over 67s, and 16-17yr olds given the right to vote. We could hand out 2 ballot papers to those with a university degree in recognition of them achieving a higher standard of academics. But we don't. And you in the country don't get special exemptions because of some idea about "earning more GDP (even though the facts show you don't)
You're shifting the goalposts in the middle of the comment from capital cities to cities in general. Capital cities only account for 67% of the population.Sorry but what?
The economic contribution of capital cities to the national economy was 69.2 per cent, with regional Australia1 contributing 30.8 per cent.
90% of people live in the city.
Definitely. Turnbull never personally invoked scare campaigns against immigrants, that I can recall anyway. Bridget Archer sat about where Turnbull did, I'd say.Malcolm Turnbull was what I consider a moderate member of the Liberal party. Would Sussan Ley be considered several steps further to the right of Malcolm? I'm thinking yes, but interested in the views of others?
Spot on. The coal seam gas exploration issue should have showed once and for all that the Nationals serve the interests of miners before those of farmers.The farmers aren't. The miners are.
Oops, nevermind.This Coalition agreement has to made public. Three parties agreeing to coalesce to form government but they won't tell you what this agreement entails doesn't sound particularly transparent to me.
Albanese reigns for 20 yearsWtf happens now?
Well yes, but what if the moderates and conservatives in the Liberal Party don't stay united and are clawing at each other the whole way down? I wonder if the Nationals are positioning themselves as a home for disaffected conservatives from the Liberal Party.While it would be tempting to say this is the end of the Liberal Party (they could never win government on their own), the first time Labor and Liberal are hung, of course the Nats would side with the Libs and give them power. I don't think it changes much in the long term. Libs are in soul-searching mode and Nats don't want to be dragged down by them at the moment.
While it would be tempting to say this is the end of the Liberal Party (they could never win government on their own), the first time Labor and Liberal are hung, of course the Nats would side with the Libs and give them power. I don't think it changes much in the long term. Libs are in soul-searching mode and Nats don't want to be dragged down by them at the moment.
"Doing them slowly" was the first thing that came to mind yesterday.Albanese reigns for 20 years