Psycho-Babble Politics Thread 1103130

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Re: Richard Flanagan

Posted by sigismund on February 9, 2019, at 22:52:25

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by sigismund on February 9, 2019, at 22:48:33

Morrison did say that many of the remaining refugees on Manus (and Nauru?) may well contain pedophiles.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 9, 2019, at 23:36:52

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by sigismund on February 9, 2019, at 22:48:33

>I am amazed that a third of the US electorate wants the wall presumably knowing that there is no emergency along the southern border. Can you explain that?

Racism? Stupidity? Ignorance?

He'll call a state of emergency. That'll be fun.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 10, 2019, at 0:04:05

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by sigismund on February 9, 2019, at 22:52:25

> Morrison did say that many of the remaining refugees on Manus (and Nauru?) may well contain pedophiles.

About ten seconds in, a rumor circulating atm. The rest of the clip is about something else.

https://tinyurl.com/yaqemn8q

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2

Posted by sigismund on February 10, 2019, at 21:05:11

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 9, 2019, at 23:36:52

I had an idea. It's nothing to do with anything on the border. It is some kind of mark of identity.........probably something to do with the (O God!, words!) liberal elites so called and the rejection of that kind of politics.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan

Posted by sigismund on February 10, 2019, at 21:12:26

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 10, 2019, at 0:04:05

Oh, that thing about women being duck taped (duck?) .......that is either too many bad movies or some kind of terrible porn. Michael Brooks wondered if Sicario 2 was influential.

Well, we are under attack, and for our values, for which they hate us, but undeterred we will etc etc.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan

Posted by sigismund on February 12, 2019, at 18:18:34

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by sigismund on February 10, 2019, at 21:12:26

Our ridiculous anglo Murdoch inspired politics will go the way of the debates under the Hapsburgs or in Wilhelmine Germany.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/feb/13/we-have-death-and-devastation-at-every-turn-the-flood-massacre-of-queensland-cattle

Half a billion cattle is quite a slice.


 

Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 14, 2019, at 16:43:41

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by sigismund on February 12, 2019, at 18:18:34

> Our ridiculous anglo Murdoch inspired politics will go the way of the debates under the Hapsburgs or in Wilhelmine Germany.
>
> https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/feb/13/we-have-death-and-devastation-at-every-turn-the-flood-massacre-of-queensland-cattle
>
> Half a billion cattle is quite a slice.
>
>
>

sigi, this is terrible. The loss of all those animals, the wildlife on top of the cattle, is sickening. I really don't know what else to say :(

What will your government do? I imagine there will be major support for the farmers-- but the overall GDP will be effected.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2

Posted by sigismund on February 14, 2019, at 21:01:56

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 14, 2019, at 16:43:41

>What will your government do?

You know....thoughts and prayers, this is not the time to be talking politics.

>I imagine there will be major support for the farmers-- but the overall GDP will be effected.

Yes, there will be some support. But Australia was settled in a way not suiting its ecology. And that is what we we will be dealing with.

This is how climate change (or whatever the euphemism is) will be....and we will see then.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 18, 2019, at 20:46:41

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2, posted by sigismund on February 14, 2019, at 21:01:56

Have you seen the book The Uninhabitable Earth? David Wallace Wells. Not that I'll read it. Reportedly, the book is the bleakest, which seems appropriate.

--really, I cannot imagine what will come.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2

Posted by sigismund on February 19, 2019, at 13:23:47

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 18, 2019, at 20:46:41

Fortunately we will both be dead.

Given how politics has gone with minimal population movements I don't think it will cope with what is to come.

We need not be detained by the rapists and drug dealers in the caravan on the border, or the pedophiles waiting to enter Australia from Manus..........what will it be like when there are real problems?

Unfortunately elections can be won like this, but I wonder if it is passing its use-by date for now.

We were watching a biopic about an outfit at a place called Buddhafield. What was interesting was how the belief fell away rather quickly once credibility was lost.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 19, 2019, at 16:38:59

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2, posted by sigismund on February 19, 2019, at 13:23:47

Yes, but our kids will be here.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2

Posted by sigismund on February 19, 2019, at 21:23:32

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 19, 2019, at 16:38:59

You see this?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLSjypKJQaQ

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2

Posted by sigismund on February 19, 2019, at 21:56:23

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 19, 2019, at 16:38:59

I gave up hoping that there was sufficient concern for future generations or the web of life. There seemed to be a cynical, hidden belief that, although it did not exist and wasn't happening, it was already too late, along with a perverse pleasure in seeing the poor and coloured suffer first and most.

We have the same thing. From the alternative media today........

There is now something more than anger attached to this government. Theres a sort of disgust around. Disgust with them, at the sheer volume of waste, shonk and grift, disgust with ourselves for having let it go for so long, for being the mugs who let it happen. It is once again of the paradox of Australian self-conception. Weve imagined ourselves to be relatively uncorrupt and competently governed for so long, that a keener sense that government had entirely collapsed into cronyism, clientelism and dirty tricks was lacking. The capacity for trust in Australia is being rotted from the top down. Its rational to think of a Coalition government the way Italians tend to think of their government, something that has absolutely nothing to do with representation at all: simply a self-contained predatory element, feeding off the body social.
This is part of the intent of right-wing parties of course, to increase cynicism and distrust of government altogether, and enrich themselves at the same time. All the same, they may well have overshot the mark in the last year or so. Am I alone in feeling sick to my stomach, literally nauseous, at reading the national news these days, wondering what the next story of corrupt, corrosive, destructive rorts is going to be? Is disgust now a live political factor? I think it might be. We now have a fundamental asymmetry in Australian politics. One major political party, Labor, capable of government; one minor, the Greens, with some internal strife, but no accusations of rorting. And on the other side something that is neither a Coalition, nor parties at all. Its simply a random, rhizomatic piss cloud of sleaze, grift, incompetence, reactionary obsessiveness, glued together by nothing other than hatred not merely of the left, but of good government itself, and an eye for the skim off the top.
The disgust is something more than political contestation or the belief that the political right, in our era, is a sham. Its a real pain that this has happened to our country. There was, as Ive noted before, until about a decade ago, some sort of implicit agreement about limits, some sense of being pointed forward, whatever political differences there might have been about what form progress would take. The effect of living in such a continental Rortopolis is to make you feel like a mug for doing anything other than making millions from transfers of state money for no product. Why bother? While youre putting your energy into art, science, honest commerce, the very fact that you thereby entrust other people with governance is taken by them as a chance to shonk it.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 20, 2019, at 15:09:54

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2, posted by sigismund on February 19, 2019, at 21:23:32

> You see this?
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLSjypKJQaQ

No I didn't. Thank you. I'm relieved he emphasized climate-- geez, I don't think it's been mentioned yet. I've been keeping my head down as the election ballyhoo is tuning up.

There is some talk Biden might run. I hope not.

Right now I have a cold and feel miserable, so my normal enthusiasm is low.

 

Re: Richard Flanagan

Posted by beckett2 on February 20, 2019, at 15:25:35

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2, posted by sigismund on February 19, 2019, at 21:56:23

Shonk? I needed to look that up. I love Australian English. I assume shonk is used in your country and NZ.

>I gave up hoping that there was sufficient concern for future generations or the web of life. There seemed to be a cynical, hidden belief that, although it did not exist and wasn't happening, it was already too late, along with a perverse pleasure in seeing the poor and coloured suffer first and most.

Yeah. Idk sigi. I don't really understand. Our security and military agencies report global warming as a security risk-- but I don't know what anyone in gov or business does with that information. Maybe there's an idea that there will be winners in this scenario?

Here's something nice:

https://tinyurl.com/y65z8qcm

 

Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2

Posted by sigismund on February 20, 2019, at 19:09:15

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by beckett2 on February 20, 2019, at 15:25:35

Goodness me! How beautiful!

There's some park in the US, somewhere dry where it snows, with wonderful rock formations. It's not called cathedral national park. Maybe it is in Utah or Arizona? I can't think of the name, but when the sun catches the snow it is magic.

I wish I could be this calm.......

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_nFI2Zb7qE

 

Re: Richard Flanagan

Posted by sigismund on February 20, 2019, at 20:22:42

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2, posted by sigismund on February 20, 2019, at 19:09:15

This is it......I have no sense the scale.

https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&channel=mac_bm&tbm=isch&sa=1&ei=bgpuXNGbNMmy9QOX1J7IBA&q=bryce+canyon+national+park+images&oq=bryce+canyon+national+park+images&gs_l=img.12...0.0..44952...0.0..0.0.0.......0......gws-wiz-img.809sqdgwQXA#imgrc=OlP5qrpuB6F_NM:

 

Re: Richard Flanagan

Posted by beckett2 on February 21, 2019, at 17:00:52

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan » beckett2, posted by sigismund on February 20, 2019, at 19:09:15

> Goodness me! How beautiful!
>
> There's some park in the US, somewhere dry where it snows, with wonderful rock formations. It's not called cathedral national park. Maybe it is in Utah or Arizona? I can't think of the name, but when the sun catches the snow it is magic.
>
> I wish I could be this calm.......
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_nFI2Zb7qE

Thank you! That was fantastic. Oddly, it was calming. His comments at Davos had the same effect. A little giddy, then calm, as though, "yes, it really is that simple, isn't it?"

 

Joe Bageant

Posted by sigismund on February 22, 2019, at 14:48:21

In reply to Re: Richard Flanagan, posted by beckett2 on February 21, 2019, at 17:00:52

I didn't know I could find this. One of my heroes, very smart and funny too. I'd never heard his voice. Oddly enough he was a military historian who, IIRC, estimated the current value (5 years ago) of a slave at $300,000.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2016/08/06/the-kingdom-of-survival-joe-bageant/

 

Re: Joe Bageant

Posted by sigismund on February 23, 2019, at 15:25:45

In reply to Joe Bageant, posted by sigismund on February 22, 2019, at 14:48:21

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9J-Dy0OcKw

 

Re: Joe Bageant » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on February 24, 2019, at 18:38:15

In reply to Joe Bageant, posted by sigismund on February 22, 2019, at 14:48:21

I didn't know he was a military historian. Was he raised in a christian household? My father firmly believed we are our brother's keeper. How that gets tripped up with corporate US (which I'm afraid has globalized).

I understand going to Belize, just to be away from cultural suffocation.

We're in Venezuela again. Jeremy Scahill says the bridge that is blocked was never a functioning bridge-- and a google shows there are other bridges into Venezuela. I don't understand it-- but Bageant would be able to speak about it. Certainly, ordinary citizens pay for the political theater.

The thing he said about Obama, that at least the rhetoric is good. He didn't have a single investigation into his administration. We're drowning in scandal right now. And cruelty.

I'm reading a book by a conservative, and what I find refreshing is his interest in facts. Obama said recently that with facts, you can at least begin to have a discussion.

 

Re: Joe Bageant

Posted by sigismund on February 25, 2019, at 4:14:33

In reply to Re: Joe Bageant » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on February 24, 2019, at 18:38:15

I think he died around 2011. The US is an older society than we are. He said, 'There WERE a time when the Democrats were getting their noses broken.....', it's an older English, isn't it? And the reference to Cain and Abel, rather than the New Testament, it feels as if from an older time.

Now most Democrats are lining up for freedom and Democracy. I wasn't paying attention when Obama named Venezuela a clear and present danger (or whatever) to the US. Anyway they will get their war by 2020 and unintended consequences. God knows, people may swallow it again, there will be chaos enough.

The fact that Trumps support is greater than GWB's at the end of his time makes me realise that I don't understand. 34%? That's huge, IMO.

Aryan Death Cult is not as extreme as it sounds. We are surrounded by cults and ponzi schemes. People have believed in and fought over all sorts of stuff.

Still, I can't see Trump being president after 2020.

 

Michael Cohen » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on March 3, 2019, at 19:27:53

In reply to Re: Joe Bageant, posted by sigismund on February 25, 2019, at 4:14:33

Perhaps my favorite comeback answer of the hearing. Mr. Cohen was certainly no pushover.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wS-5mTfzbxI

 

Re: Michael Cohen

Posted by sigismund on March 4, 2019, at 11:55:04

In reply to Michael Cohen » sigismund, posted by beckett2 on March 3, 2019, at 19:27:53

No he wasn't. I watched a fair bit of it (Majority Report).

Australian Politics 101 #The Greens

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/mar/04/if-the-greens-dont-do-something-radical-they-will-be-on-10-primary-vote-until-the-end-of-earth

 

Re: Michael Cohen » sigismund

Posted by beckett2 on March 4, 2019, at 12:55:39

In reply to Re: Michael Cohen, posted by sigismund on March 4, 2019, at 11:55:04

Haha, yes, I read this :) "I'm a cartoonist, I know what I'm doing!"

Here there is a similar bickering on the left (although your Greens are a third party). I call it the left eating it's young. Who is the most left is a destructive force. Hopefully we'll pull together rather than driving into a ditch while arguing.

A third party. I like to imagine how that would be here....

trump has thrown down the gauntlet over socialism. Gasp. So this is what 2020 will be about.

Michael Cohen said something about the peaceful transfer of power should trump lose. The other day trump remarked something about "we must take our country back!" From whom?


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