Tuesday 28 October 2014

Upside down downunder - The AIM Network

Upside down downunder - The AIM Network



Upside down downunder














We sure do things upside down downunder.


Tony Abbott’s chief business adviser first tells us we are unprepared
for global cooling, followed by lashing out at the UN response to the
Ebola outbreak and labelling the world body a “refuge of anti-western
authoritarians bent on achieving one-world government”.



Newman
wrote an opinion piece for the Australian newspaper in which he said
the UN’s “leanings are predominantly socialist and antipathetical to the
future security and prosperity of the west”.



“The philosophy of the UN is basically anti-capitalist,” he writes.
“Countries that pay the most dues, mostly rich Anglo countries, are
those to which the world body shows the greatest disdain.”



Is he suggesting that we should receive foreign aid in thanks for
using up all of the world’s resources while killing the planet?



Aside from Maurice Newman’s bizarre ravings, our inaction on climate
change, our inadequate response to the Ebola crisis, the chief executive
of Whitehaven Coal telling us that coal “may well be the only energy
source” that can address man-made climate change, and the sheer
bastardry of cutting real wages and entitlements to defence personnel as
we send them off to war…..we are also ignoring the call from the rest
of the world to take action to address income inequality.



Despite being one of the richest nations on earth, one in seven Australians are living in poverty
Thirty per cent of Australians who receive social security payments
live below the poverty line, including 55 per cent of those on
unemployment benefits. Fifteen per cent of aged pensioners live in
poverty.



So it seems unfathomable as to why these people would be targeted when the government is looking for savings.


Since 1980, the richest 1 percent increased their share of income in 24 out of 26 countries for which the IMF have data.


In the US, the share of income taken home by the top one percent more
than doubled since the 1980s, returning to where it was on the eve of
the Great Depression. In the UK, France, and Germany, the share of
private capital in national income is now back to levels last seen
almost a century ago.



The 85 richest people in the world, who could fit into a single
London double-decker, control as much wealth as the poorest half of the
global population– that is 3.5 billion people.



With facts like these, it is no wonder that rising inequality has
risen to the top of the agenda—not only among groups normally focused on
social justice, but also increasingly among politicians, central
bankers, and business leaders.



Our politicians are telling us that they want to provide the
opportunity for each person to be their best selves but the reality is
that we do not have equal opportunity. Money will always buy
better-quality education and health care, for example. But due to
current levels of inequality, too many people in too many countries have
only the most basic access to these services, if at all. Fundamentally,
excessive inequality makes capitalism less inclusive. It hinders people
from participating fully and developing their potential.



Disparity also brings division. The principles of solidarity and
reciprocity that bind societies together are more likely to erode in
excessively unequal societies. History also teaches us that democracy
begins to fray at the edges once political battles separate the haves
against the have-nots.



A greater concentration of wealth could—if unchecked—even undermine
the principles of meritocracy and democracy. It could undermine the
principle of equal rights proclaimed in the 1948 Universal Declaration
of Human Rights.



Redistributive policies always produce winners and losers. Yet if we
want capitalism to do its job—enabling as many people as possible to
participate and benefit from the economy—then it needs to be more
inclusive. That means addressing extreme income disparity.



One way to address this is through a progressive tax system but
instead, our government is looking at regressive measures like
increasing the fuel excise and the GST. These will impact far more
greatly on low income earners.



Another avenue is to expand access to education and health but
instead, our government is cutting needs-based education funding, making
the cost of tertiary education prohibitive, and introducing a
co-payment to discourage people from seeing the doctor.



Abbott, Hockey and Cormann assure us that if we make the rich richer
we will all benefit. Everyone from the Pope to Rupert Murdoch knows this
is rubbish.



Two weeks ago In Washington, in a speech to the world’s most powerful finance ministers and central bankers, Rupert Murdoch accused them of making policies to benefit the super rich.


In it, he blamed the leaders for increasing inequality, said the
ladder of generational progress was now at risk, and warned that a
moment of great global reckoning had arrived.



I note that his criticism of poor policy does not stop him from
taking advantage of said policies. “I’ll only be as good as you make me
be” seems to be the prevailing principle.



Hockey’s response to Murdoch’s barrage was interesting.


“Certainly, as he says, loose monetary policy has helped people who
own a lot of assets to become richer, and that’s why loose monetary
policy needs to be reversed over time, and we’ll get back to normal
levels of monetary policy, normal levels of interest rates,” Mr Hockey
told AM’s presenter Chris Uhlmann.



“Governments, on the other hand, have also run out of money and can’t
keep spending money – particularly on the credit card – to try and
stimulate growth.



“So, if loose monetary policy is not available and actually makes the
rich get richer, and governments have run out of money, how are we
going to get growth going in the world economy over the next few years?
And the only way to do it is through structural changes that make us
better at what we do.”



The structural changes suggested by Mr Hockey will increase
inequality and send more people into poverty which is indeed what
Coalition governments are good at doing.



Pope Francis recently tweeted “Inequality is the root of social evil.”


In last autumn’s essay, Evangelii Gaudium, Francis wrote that: “Just
as the commandment ‘Thou shalt not kill’ sets a clear limit in order to
safeguard the value of human life, today we also have to say ‘Thou shalt
not’ to an economy of exclusion and inequality. Such an economy kills …
Today everything comes under the laws of competition and the survival
of the fittest, where the powerful feed upon the powerless. As a
consequence, masses of people find themselves excluded and marginalised:
without work, without possibilities, without any means of escape. Human
beings are themselves considered consumer goods to be used and then
discarded.”



The claim that human beings have an intrinsic value in themselves,
irrespective of their usefulness to other people, is one that unites
Christianity and socialism. But if you think the market is the real
world, it makes no sense at all, since in the market, value is simply
the outcome of supply and demand.



A recent article by Lissa Johnson discusses decades of research into political psychology.


“Another ubiquitous finding is that conservatism is inversely related
to the pursuit of social and economic equality. Conservatism correlates
strongly with a preference for fixed social hierarchies entailing
inequality between social groups, along with punitive attitudes towards
marginalised and/or non-conforming members of society, who are seen as
destabilising elements that threaten social cohesion.”



Australia is indeed a wondrous place where coal will save us from
climate change, where helping the rich to get richer will make us all
happier, and where the poor will be asked to pay off the nation’s debt.



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Monday 27 October 2014

A Week is a Long Time in Politics - The AIM Network

A Week is a Long Time in Politics - The AIM Network



A Week is a Long Time in Politics














If ever a week in politics supported a
headline it was the week that Gough Whitlam died. In the main the death
of this, undeniably charismatic, but gifted man was met with sadness by
both supporter and foe alike.

goughThe
exceptions who didn’t were Bolt and Jones. Yes, the two who write and
comment outrageously on the basis of payment for controversy didn’t but
eventually they will pass on as Gough did.

They will be quickly forgotten but he will go down in the annals of
Australian history as a decent, sanguine, passionate and sagacious Prime
Minister who made an enormous contribution to Australian society.



Something they could never aspire to do.


Yes the week was filled with controversy that only a government devoid of any semblance of leadership could muster.


barnaby joyceIn
Parliament the Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce (The probable deputy
PM if Abbott wins the next election) got the details of how many
Australians have received drought assistance completely and utterly
wrong.



Shadow Agriculture Minister Joel Fitzgibbon called him out but as you
would guess, Bronny Bishop ruled he didn’t have to answer. It wasn’t
until early evening he skulked back into the chamber and quietly
corrected his answer. It’s hard to explain what Barnaby said. If you can
decipher it you deserve a medal.



“…you actually get the money until the department decides
that you are not allowed to get the money, and at this point in time.
So you keep on getting the money, you keep on getting the money, until
such time as, on the application being assessed, they decide you are not
eligible for it. But it is not the case that you apply for the money
and then you have to wait for your application to be approved, you
actually get the money straight away.”

Anyway on Tuesday of this week he got a whiff of his own ineptitude and tried to change the official Hansard record.


com bankThen
the Government for a Royal Commission into anything Labor refused to
hold one into the Commonwealth Bank of Australia as part of its response
to a landmark Senate inquiry. This is one of the worst scandals in
Australian corporate history. It has ruined the lives of thousands of
people but the government’s approach seems to be to let financial
planners proceed as if nothing has happened.



During all this the boss of the corporate regulator, ASIC said.


‘’Australia is too soft on corporate criminals and increased civil penalties including more jail terms are needed.’’


“Australia is a paradise for white-collar crime.” He said.

On Royal Commissions that are politically motivated John Howard had this to say.


“I’m uneasy about the idea of having royal commissions or inquiries into essentially a political decision…”

“I don’t think you should ever begin to go down the American path of using the law for narrow targeted political purposes.”

Abbott obviously believes in the total obliteration of one’s opposition and will even provide cabinet papers if he has too.


tell tonyIn
senate estimates we heard from treasury officials that the Prime
Ministers Paid Parental Leave Scheme has ground to a halt. According to
senior insiders, it is in serious trouble and loathed by virtually every
minister in cabinet.



Our Prime Minister once again showing that he is incapable of governance for the common good.


turnbullIn the midst of all this we had talk of Malcolm Turnbull replacing Hockey as treasurer.

“It’d be a game changer,” one minister summarised. No one disagreed with
the soundness of the idea. True, he would bring competence and
authority to the Treasury portfolio. He has the ability to articulate a
message clearly and forcefully.



But the mere suggestion that this might happen is a reflection of the
total incompetency of this Abbott led bunch of out of touch morons.



freya newmanWe
were greeted with another headline that the whistle-blower Freya Newman
had had her sentence deferred until November. Did she break the law?
She did, but in so doing revealed yet another instance of the Prime
Ministers use of his office for personal gain further defining his
personal lack of integrity. As if it could degenerate any further.



The curriculum taught in our schools never seems to go away when conservatives are in power.


barry spurrFor
its review the coalition appointed its usual array of religious zealots
and those of indigenous indifference, all sympathetic to the
government’s point of view. But this time one of the appointees,
Professor Barry Spurr, further advanced his expertise in all things
conservative with some emails that could only be describes as indecent.
He said they were part of a ‘linguistic game’. Ah the games people play.



Perhaps the PM might consider some people of independent mind for future inquiries instead of the usual hacks.


But there’s more. It was a long week.


indexscott morrisonIt
seemed that Scott Morrison wanted to be the minister for everything.
When interviewed on AM he denied that other ministers were resentful of
him trying to take over part of their portfolios. But members of the
press gallery confirmed it.



When asked in question time how his portfolio crossed over with
Foreign Affairs, Defense, Agriculture, Health, Defense,
Attorney-Generals and Prime Minister and Cabinet it wasn’t only the
Labor side of the chamber laughing at him.



But Bronny Bishop ruled he didn’t have to answer.


And to add to the weeks worries the Government still cannot get its budget passed. To quote Lenore Taylor in the Guardian.


budgetThe Abbott government’s “Operation Budget Repair” appears to have morphed into “Operation Let’s Salvage What The Hell We Can”.


Kevin Andrews said he would consider “any reasonable offer” from
crossbench senators in a last-ditch bid to get at least some of his
$10bn in stalled welfare changes through the Senate. On top of that
there is the fuel excise, that Medicare co-payment and the dramatic
changes to higher education. What a bloody nightmare. It’s a pity Abbott
doesn’t have the negotiating skills of Gillard.



He and Joe have never been able to admit why the electorate so
comprehensively rejected the budget? We all know that the savings fell
heaviest on those least able to pay. Now they are saying they will
reveal more in the mid-year budget update. This can only mean more
unpopular cuts. Or a mini budget.



essentialThe
Essential Poll during the week found 72% felt the cost of living had
become worse in the past 12 months and 48% believe that over the past
two years their income has fallen behind their cost of living. That
figure rises to 57% for those earning less than $1,000 a week.



It was the worst received budget in many decades. Spending cuts have
to be fair, and be seen to be fair, but people also need to understand
the overall plan, the purpose, dare we call it the program.



Later in the week when talking about Federal and state responsibilities Abbott said.


“It is in this great country of ours possible to have a better form of government”

I would have thought a good place to start would be to stop telling lies.


retHaving
appointed a group of climate deniers to report on the Renewable Energy
Target and Tony Abbott wanting it removed altogether the government, in
the face of public opinion, now finds itself in a dilemma. It wants to
compromise on the 20% target saying electricity usage has already
declined. Shorten should not fall for that nonsense. Add in their
ridiculous Direct Action policy and you can see we have, in spite of
their various university degrees, a bunch of dunderheads governing us.
Perhaps I should have said dickheads.



To be honest I could go on for another couple of thousand words but
I’m exhausted. I haven’t mentioned Bishops aspirations for leadership,
the credit card negotiations with the banks on welfare payments and fact
that his sisters have joined the chorus of condemnation for a privately
owned aged-care facility on public parklands at Middle Head.



Then there’s the criticism of the proposed Medibank float that has
been described as laughable. Oh, then of course reports that Chrissy
Pyne was backing down on his university policy. He said he wasn’t but
then I’m not that sure he would know himself.

Goodness I have left out the most serious issue of Ebola. The
government’s response has been abysmal to say the least. Just another
example of their ineffectiveness. The AMA was right to give Abbott a
serve.



In an effort to sound amusing and to allay the fears of those who think I am being overly negative I will close with this.


indexCarbon tax celebrationI promise this is true. Greg Hunt, is the man who some people refer to as the Environment Minister.


In Opposition he advocated for the protection of the Tasmania Tiger,
extinct since 1936. In Government he’s turned his attention to the
Antarctic Walrus – population: zero. Walruses live in the Northern
Hemisphere.



Oh wait, bugger I almost forgot. Were you also aware that Catherine
King exposed how it would soon cost up to $2,207 for someone to have
their liver metastasis diagnosed? Tony Abbott refused to say how many
people will miss out on being diagnosed as a result of the hit to
imaging and diagnostic services.



But the week did began with the Speaker announcing she would not
continue with the policy of segregation which had been announced as
Parliament rose a fortnight earlier.



Hopefully we can now go back to segregation being something kids
learn about in the courtroom scenes of To Kill a Mockingbird not during
their excursion to Canberra.



The final word for ‘’A week is a Long Time in Politics’’ must
go to Newspoll which had the Opposition six points up on the Government
without so much as them striking a blow.



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The inconvenient link between mental health and ‘lone wolf’ terrorism



The reality of radicalisation and terrorism is far more complex than the simplistic, self-serving narratives offered by politicians and the media.

Security at Parliament House was “boosted” after last week’s shootings at Canada’s National War Memorial and parliament in Ottawa, one media outlet reported on Thursday, although the boost was perhaps merely in relation to visibility — a “symbolic” move, the ABC said. Security at Parliament House is plainly a touchy subject now, after revelations last week that the circumstances that led to the now-rescinded decision to separate visitors because of their religious beliefs and confine them to a glass chamber, were confected. Coalition politicians Bronwyn Bishop and Stephen Parry overruled advice from officials in order to exploit an invented claim about a burqa-based protest at Parliament House — phoned in to a radio station — to claim there was a plot to disrupt parliamentary proceedings.
Just for a moment, we saw publicly exposed how politicians exploit terrorism, producing national security based on bigotry, bullshit and Chinese whispers.
But why had security been boosted on Thursday, symbolically or otherwise, because of events on the other side of the world? That wasn’t explained, or asked — people simply accepted that that’s what one does in such circumstances. It was up to Tony Abbott to make clear the link. He convened a meeting of the national security committee (sans the Defence Minister, who correctly observed he had nothing to offer) and declared the attack was “further confirmation that the threat to free countries and free institutions is very real indeed”.
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop went further, diagnosing terrorism at work. “The Canadian authorities haven’t made the connection, but I have to say it does have a hallmarks of a terrorist attack,” said Bishop. On Friday morning, Abbott singled out the Last Post, a daily ceremony at the War Memorial, as a specific terrorist target, despite the head of the War Memorial, Brendan Nelson — a former Coalition defence minister, as well as opposition leader — saying there had been no threat.
But the lack of evidence of a threat isn’t a problem any longer, because the “lone wolf attack” is the new black in terrorism narratives. “Lone wolf” terrorism is an answer to what you do when you can no longer credibly talk of an “existential” terrorist threat. There will continue to be efforts to claim Islamic State has access to weapons of mass destruction: it now controls Al Muthanna, where Saddam-era chemical weapons, purchased by Iraq from the West with US support and funding, had been stockpiled (albeit in conditions as dangerous to the handlers as to intended targets), while conjecture about, if not Ebola bombers, then bubonic plague bombers, could yet breathe some bacilli-laden life into the theme. But after hyping the threat of Al Qaeda and its putative arsenal of dirty bombs, chemical weapons and bioweapons for much of the 2000s, authorities were left in a quandary in their efforts to sell the threat of IS by the apparent decline in the ability of contemporary terrorists to successfully conduct mass casualty attacks, especially given security institutions advised IS presented no threat to countries like the US.
Recognising that mental illness may play a role in some circumstances where an individual embraces political or religious violence might … disrupt the convenient notion that we are innocent, passive victims of irrational evil.”
Thus, self-radicalising “lone wolves” have now become the new threat, extremists who determine to engage in small-scale attacks using whatever resources come to hand, without communicating with anyone about it. They may not be able to do much damage, but the sheer randomness of their attacks somehow makes up for that. One “expert” even claimed such attacks could be “more powerful in terms of its psychological impacts” than mass casualty attacks.
The “lone wolf” theme complements the “viral” theory of terrorism, that Islamist extremist terrorism does not — as repeatedly argued by intelligence and law enforcement agencies — happen in response to Western military interventions in Muslim countries, but because individuals somehow contract the disease of terrorism, either via interpersonal encounters or, increasingly, via exposure, to use David Irvine’s wonderful phrase, to unfettered ideas on the internet. And while devoting law enforcement and intelligence resources to stopping “lone wolves” is considered a waste, the positive side is that they can justify a permanent heightened sense of fear about the terrorist threat.
The reality of “terrorism” is rather different. We’ve noted previously the way in which political violence by white people, mostly white males, isn’t seen as terrorism in the same way that violence by Muslims is. And the role of mental illness and drug use in terrorism receives little attention. Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, the Ottawa gunman, was a crack addict with a long history of drug addiction and mental instability who had repeatedly tried to get imprisoned in order to escape drugs. In New York, the Newburgh Four, a group serving 25 years in jail for a 2009 plot to bomb synagogues and shoot down military aircraft —  a plot organised and led by an FBI informant from the start  — involved a group of desperately poor drug users and a schizophrenic.
In fact, the FBI has a history of entrapping mentally ill people in terror plots: a Californian man sentenced to 15 years in prison for planning to blow up a bank as part of his “jihad” had a history of mental illnesses and substance abuse. Like the FBI, terrorist recruiters also tend to target the mentally unstable as likely to be more responsive to their overtures. Australian IS member Mohammad Baryalei also has a history of drug abuse and mental illness; another Australian involved with IS, Khaled Sharrouf, was diagnosed as having chronic schizophrenia, delusions, and a long history of drug use.
This doesn’t fit the national security narrative particularly well: politicians and the media prefer to portray terrorism as binary — you’re either a terrorist or you’re not, you’re wilfully evil or you’re not. Recognising that mental illness may play a role in some circumstances where an individual embraces political or religious violence might — like recognising that “Muslims do not ‘hate our freedom,’ but rather, they hate our policies”  — disrupt the convenient notion that we are innocent, passive victims of irrational evil. It might encourage the idea that we are not targeted purely because of our Western values, but rather for what we do or fail to do — like failing to provide sufficient resources to ensure vulnerable, marginalised people can access effective mental health services.

Sunday 26 October 2014

Understanding the Conservative Mind - The AIM Network

Understanding the Conservative Mind - The AIM Network



Understanding the Conservative Mind














Psychologist, Lissa Johnson (pictured above) has
given us a revealing insight into the mind of the political
conservative, in an article published in New Matilda. Lissa is a
clinical psychologist interested in the psychology of ideology and
politics, and the philosophy and politics of psychology.



“If the Abbott Government was an individual, he would be a psychopath,”
she begins before giving a detailed description of the mindset that
happily allows and promotes ultra-right wing extremism. The article
should be compulsory reading for those of us who constantly struggle
with certain aspects of the mainstream media.



Detailed studies into the difference between the psychological right
and left have been going on in earnest for the past 20 plus years. The
results are now in the public domain for all of us to examine and, I
have to say, there is not much there that surprises me.



The conservative mind is indeed a curious animal and betrays itself
through language and form. Johnson, in her article, sets about
dissecting the Abbott government’s aversion to equality for all, their
resistance to change and explains the reasoning behind their attitude to
the unemployed, the disadvantaged and those on the lower levels of the
socio-economic ladder.



They have an aversion to social and economic equality. They suffer
from ‘Right Wing Authoritarianism’ which rejects openness and
accountability. They are hierarchical in structure, anti-egalitarian
which Johnson tells us, “correlates with conservatism but also with the
‘dark triad’ of personality: Narcissism, Machiavellianism and
Psychopathy.”



votingBut,
conservatism comes in degrees and not all who vote conservative
necessarily embody these characteristics. For those who enter politics,
however, the stronger the psychological underpinning, the stronger the
views.



For example, conservatives have a pressing need to arrive at fixed
and firm answers to complex questions, described by psychologists as a
need for cognitive closure. In other words, they need to keep things
simple. One can only presume that they have a short attention span and
this pressing need is for their benefit, rendering any further review
unnecessary.



Their need for cognitive closure means they shun open mindedness, and
they are suspicious of science and the arts and distrust foreign food
and culture. Already we can see how this manifests in policies on boat
people and climate change.



catholicAs
I read Johnson’s article, I could not help comparing it with my own
upbringing as a Catholic. The hierarchy, the inflexibility of rules, the
dominance, inequality and resistance to change. The Catholic Church was
able to maintain this inflexibility through relentless psychological
pressure and trauma.



It makes me wonder if the Catholic contingent in the Abbott
government’s ministry, is a reflection of an elite conservative mindset
finding justification for its lack of compassion, humility and empathy
toward the disadvantaged; a justification that allows them to keep it
that way.



My own view is that conservative parties are only interested in
governing for today. They have no vision for tomorrow, no grand plan.
They would rather let tomorrow take care of itself. They will say what
is necessary to win support, concealing their true intent. Their intent
is being the government rather than about governing.



Johnson says that a full and frank disclosure of their intent would
render them unelectable. So they cleverly disguise their inner drive
when addressing a predominantly egalitarian society by sugar-coating
their aims and by ‘legitimising myths’ that reinforce fear and scarcity.
They use the stereotype (poor people don’t have cars) or fear (budget
emergency) to illustrate various myths.



The wearing of the Burqa is a classic example. So too, the
uncertainty of debt and deficit, ‘age of entitlement’ and the like, all
of which appeal to an elite which is itself uncertain and fearful and
perceives these issues as a threat to its way of life.



hockeyAnd
then there is the issue of prejudice, a conservative log jam that
breeds racism and the belief that underprivileged minorities are
responsible for their own circumstances; that sexual minorities and the
unemployed, welfare recipients and single mothers threaten the good
order and structure that society must uphold and maintain.



And so, after having gained power, conservative governments begin
winding back the clock, repealing uncomfortable reforms that promote and
support a more egalitarian society.



They conveniently forget or simply discard their pre-election sugar
coating and engage in legitimising their myths to justify restructuring
society back to the hierarchical, authoritarian model. They move on
dissenting voices, invoke extreme and unnecessary legislation to
‘protect’ their prejudices and reinforce their two principal aversions:
equality and change.



Johnson’s article quite neatly encapsulates what most of us on the
left either already know or have long suspected. Not that we are without
fault but at least we err on the side of compassion, empathy and
fairness. But, by knowing how to identify the idiosyncratic oddities of
the conservative mindset, we are better able to articulate a more
socially responsible alternative.



You can read the full article here.


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Saturday 25 October 2014

What Makes Them Tick: Inside The Mind Of The Abbott Government | newmatilda.com

What Makes Them Tick: Inside The Mind Of The Abbott Government | newmatilda.com

What Makes Them Tick: Inside The Mind Of The Abbott Government



By Lissa Johnson





If
the Abbott Government was an individual, he would be a psychopath. And
you wonder why they're frightened of science! Clinicial psychologist Dr
Lissa Johnson explains.




Decades
of research in political psychology has opened a window onto the
psychological heart of politics. The Abbott Government embodies the
conservative psyche in pasquinade form.



With a prime minister who threatens to shirt-front the Russian
president, a finance minister who calls the opposition leader a
girlie-man and a government advisor for whom “Abos”, “darkies” “muzzies”, “chinky-poos” and “whores” rolls comfortably off the tongue, it is little wonder people are asking what goes on in the minds of our politicians.



For different reasons, academic psychologists have been asking the same question for some time.


They say that it takes 20 years for knowledge in academic psychology
to make its way into the public domain. If that is the case, the
political psychology literature is just coming of age.



Thanks to an invigoration in 2003 of research that had been gathering
steam in the 1990s and before, we now know with considerable clarity
what separates the left psychologically from the right. And the picture
is revealing.



Political vaudeville aside, the Abbott Government offers a vivid case
study in conservative psychology that breathes life into the very
definition of conservatism.



In the political psychology literature conservatism is defined in two parts,
resting on the pillars of equality and change: accepting versus
rejecting inequality and advocating versus resisting social change.



By this definition, the conservative position on any issue involves
promotion of inequality and resistance to change. Where conservative
change is sought it is typically in the direction of inequality, winding
back historical egalitarian change.



As a case study, the Abbott Government illustrates not only these two
principles, but also their psychological building blocks, identified in
a vast number of studies from institutions around the world. These
studies, emanating from the likes of Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, NYU,
UCLA and countless other universities, have been replicated time and
again by different researchers using different measures (self-report,
implicit tests, peer-ratings, behavioural indices) and different methods
(correlational, experimental and longitudinal). In short, a reliable
body of research.



One consistent finding in this literature is that conservatism involves a cognitive tendency known as the need for cognitive closure.
This entails an impetus to arrive at fixed and firm answers to complex
questions, motivated by the drive to resolve uncertainty and ambiguity.
It manifests in seizing and freezing on opinions and ideas, or
swiftly and resolutely reaching final conclusions on complicated topics,
which then remain closed to further review.



Our government’s policy on climate change, for instance, comes to mind. As does its haste to pass legislation without debate.


The conservative need for cognitive closure is broadly rooted in a
personality style that psychologists call “closed-minded” or often
simply “closed”. It involves low levels the personality trait Openness to Experience, which is widely accepted as one of the five core dimensions of personality.



People low on Openness prefer certainty, order, structure, the
familiar, predictability, simplicity, and sticking with the tried and
true. They dislike change, complexity, uncertainty, ambiguity, novelty
and flexibility. They are less intellectually curious than their more
open counterparts, disinclined to examine their own ideas and views, and
as a result are often suspicious of science and the arts. They also
tend to dislike new experiences, frequently including but not limited to
foreign people, culture and food.



Our government’s distaste for science ministers and asylum seekers, then, makes sense.


Another ubiquitous finding is that conservatism is inversely related
to the pursuit of social and economic equality. Conservatism correlates
strongly with a preference for fixed social hierarchies entailing
inequality between social groups, along with punitive attitudes towards
marginalised and/or non-conforming members of society, who are seen as
destabilising elements that threaten social cohesion.



This anti-egalitarian psychological characteristic, with over 50 years of research behind it, is known as Right Wing Authoritarianism. It is predicted by low levels of Openness, with the associated need for a predictable, orderly and controlled social world.


Right Wing Authoritarianism has a younger cousin, with 20 years of research behind it, known as Social Dominance Orientation.
A darker pathway to ideological views, Social Dominance Orientation is
more a ruthless and competitive form of anti-egalitarianism. It not only
correlates with conservatism but also with the ‘dark triad’ of
personality: Narcissism, Machiavellianism and Psychopathy.



In newer research, conservatism has also been found to correlate
inversely with compassion, humility, dispositional fairness, altruism
and empathy.



So robust are the psychological findings that John Jost of NYU
and his colleagues propose that political orientation “may be
structured according to a left-right dimension for primarily
psychological (rather than logical or philosophical) reasons… linked to
variability in the needs to reduce uncertainty and threat”.



Of course not all people who vote for conservative political parties
embody all, or even necessarily some, of the psychological correlates.
What the research indicates is that the more conservative a person is,
on average, the more strongly they are likely to display these
characteristics. Fortunately none of us, as individuals, is entirely
average.



In fact, some studies have found that the more politically active a
person is the stronger the psychological underpinning of their ideology
is likely to be. Thus we could expect our leaders’ political views to be
more, rather than less, psychologically driven than our own.



And more hell bent on inequality and opposing change.


In a world of increasing egalitarianism the conservative position can
make for a hard sell. Politicians with an agenda as conservative as the
Abbott Government’s can’t to go to the polls wearing their manifesto on
their sleeves. “We promise to preserve and intensify privilege,
entrench disadvantage and wind back egalitarian change, putting a halt
to its further spread.”



As a result, in order to gain power conservative political parties
are compelled to sugar-coat their agenda to be palatable in a putatively
egalitarian world. A conservative stock-in-trade to this end is what
political scientists call ‘legitmising myths’, or ideologies that
justify discrimination against disadvantaged groups.



Legitimising myths typically appeal to fear, which increases
political conservatism; scarcity, which increases competition between
social groups; and stereotypes, which smooth the way for discrimination
against less privileged members of a society. For instance,
“Burqa-wearing women are potential terrorists who threaten our safety
and our way of life” is a myth that appeals to all three.



While the Abbott Government relied more heavily on lies than
myth-making on its way to the election, since gaining office Abbott and
his ministers have had a crack at a few legitimising myths of their own.



They have been successful with some, for example ‘The carbon tax will
cripple the economy (fear and scarcity)’. They have limped along lamely
with a few, such as the ‘Budget emergency’ (fear and scarcity again)
and ‘Age of entitlement’ (stereotype).



Other efforts at legitimising mythology have received hostile
reception, for instance ‘The unemployed just need to try harder’
(stereotype), and ‘Poor people don’t have cars’ (stereotype again). Some
are just plain silly, such as ‘Coal is good for humanity’ (tempting to
type ‘insanity’ here).



On Aboriginal people, the Government has opted for the most effective
and time-honoured myth of all, ‘They don’t exist – at least not
really.’ Silence and collective blindness have worked for governments
until now. This kind of psychological apartheid (literally
“apart-hood”), keeping races psychologically apart, is a stealthy
variety of stereotype that serves to obscure the very existence and
legitimacy of an entire race.



A prime example is the call for a more westernised version of history
in the national curriculum, one that emphasises Judeo-Christian
heritage and scales back focus on Aboriginal history. It not only seeks
to reverse historical egalitarian change, but also serves to push
Aboriginal Australians even further out of our collective awareness and
understanding.



The Government’s most recent legitimising rhetoric, ‘The war on
terror at home’, is probably the most potent and promising of all. In
numerous studies, invoking fear and even simply thinking about death
increases self-reported conservatism and endorsement of conservative
policies, candidates, and values.



For instance, in time series analyses George W Bush’s approval
ratings and policy support soared after every upgrading of the national
terrorist alert. Similarly, priming threat by asking people to rate
statements such as “I worry that terrorists might strike any time
anywhere” raises levels of both closed-mindedness and conservatism.



So strong is the fear connection that a brain structure integral to
fear - the amygdala - is larger, on average, in conservatives relative
to their ‘small l’ liberal counterparts.



Jost explains it thus: “Stability and hierarchy appear to provide
reassurance and structure inherently, whereas social change and equality
imply greater chaos and unpredictability…. People may be
psychologically unwilling or unable to embrace the unpredictability
associated with social change and increased equality when they are
feeling threatened or experiencing aversive levels of uncertainty”



Exploiting ISIS for all it’s worth, then, is Tony Abbott’s best hope. The “death cult” refrain no doubt helps. Although Australians are at greater risk of death from falling off a ladder or out of bed, a cult is far more scary. And better on which to build stereotypes.


Given that stereotypes and prejudice feed and thrive on fear and
justify inequality, it is perhaps not surprising that prejudice has been
found to correlate with conservatism in a number of studies.
Conservatism is most often associated with racism, particularly of the
“modern” kind, which holds that underprivileged racial groups are
responsible for their own disadvantage, but also prejudice in general,
including prejudice against sexual minorities, women, and other
disadvantaged or marginalised groups.



The attitudes of Professor Barry Spurr – the Sydney University
academic and contributor to the review of the National School Curriculum
who was suspended after a series of racist, misogynistic emails - may
be more prototypical than we would like to think.



Jim Sidanius of UCLA and colleagues say, “Political conservatism and
racism should be strongly correlated, because both ideologies are
motivated by a common desire to assert the superiority of the in-group
over relevant out-groups, and they justify such group superiority in
terms that appear both morally and intellectually justifiable.” Or at
least they try.



With prejudice, in pursuit of inequality we have seen the Abbott
Government target “entitled” pensioners, welfare recipients, young
people, single parents, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Australians, the chronically ill and the disabled for a good kicking
down the economic hierarchy. We have seen treatment of “illegal” asylum seekers sink to new lows,
efforts to keep those with modest bank balances out of tertiary
education, and to make healthcare inaccessible to low income groups.



These latter measures are important if inequality is to be a stable feature of a society, as they lock disadvantage in place.


Winding back egalitarian change has also proceeded apace. There has
been the repeal of the carbon tax, axing of numerous climate change
research and advisory bodies (ensuring inequality between current and
future generations), abolishing a dedicated Disability Discrimination
Commissioner, seeking, albeit unsuccessfully, to water down racial
discrimination legislation, seeking to scale back focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history
and Asia in the national curriculum, disbanding the Immigration Health
Advisory Group, and proposing regressive changes to migration law described by legal experts as cruel and inhumane and designed to subvert international law.



Not to forget the rushed changes to national security legislation, under fire from legal experts for encroaching on fundamental human rights and damaging the democratic cornerstone of press freedom.


Increasing a Government’s powers to jail journalists and removing journalists’ rights to defences such as public interest is one way to keep a society in its place. As is giving ASIO the power to "add, copy, delete or alter" information on computer devices. But there are others.


For instance, the Government’s introduction of social media guidelines prohibiting public servants from criticising the government. Or the gag clauses on community organisations such as Legal Aid Centres, also to prevent them from criticising the Government.


And what of mission creep in the war on criticism?


If the Government fails to expand and protect its borders around
secrecy, then whistleblowers and ‘citizen/academic/activist journalists’
might continue speaking out.



The two ideals most dear to our Government’s extremist ideological
heart could be exposed for what they are: change-aversion and
inequality.



Our leaders’ policies might be outed as fanatical versions of these ideals, worthy of a terror alert all their own.


That would never do.




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Friday 17 October 2014

Putin-Abbott showdown to derail G20

Putin-Abbott showdown to derail G20

Putin-Abbott showdown to derail G20





There’s
no doubt our former journalist prime minister knows how to craft a
tabloid headline. He operates always with an eye to maximising his
domestic political advantage. And in recent months he’s been scoring
points. But this week he became the headline rather than writing it.



The government’s recovery in the opinion polls can be directly linked
to its handling of the July MH17 airline atrocity in Ukraine. Tony
Abbott was first out of the blocks internationally to blame Russia and
accuse it of complicity in murder. But when Labor’s Bill Shorten painted
him as a wimp, all talk and no action for failing to prevent president
Vladimir Putin from coming to the Brisbane G20 summit, the prime
minister played haplessly into the politics: “Look, I’m going to
shirtfront Mr Putin – you bet I am.”



As a headline, it was solid gold. And for good measure he ran his
“murdered” accusation again. The outburst drew yet more lurid tabloid
headlines, this time from the old Soviet mouthpiece Pravda.



The elegantly monikered Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey, a veteran columnist
for Pravda.ru with impeccable Kremlin connections, let fly. Not once,
but two days in a row. “It was the most blatant example of shit-faced
ignorance and pig-headed arrogance the world has seen,” he thundered,
“since the likes of Hitler or Pol Pot.”




Cutting through the hyperbole from Moscow, Australia’s last
ambassador to the Soviet Union and first envoy to the Russian
Federation, Cavan Hogue, said: “It’s pretty clear that he’s [Putin] not
really interested very much in what our prime minister says.” He told
the ABC’s RN Breakfast that the cut-through message was Australia is “ignorant and Russia has already offered co-operation”.



That co-operation came with Moscow fully supporting, not vetoing,
Australia’s United Nations Security Council resolution condemning the
downing of a civilian aircraft and calling for an unfettered
investigation and access to the crash site.



Before he tried to out-macho Shorten, as the colourful senator Jacqui
Lambie put it, Abbott was much more measured: “I don’t believe for a
moment that President Putin wanted that plane brought down. But
obviously Russian policy has brought about a situation that caused this
atrocity to take place.”



So far, the Dutch investigators have not reached that conclusion and a
senior Russian parliamentarian, Vyacheslav Nikonov, is sticking by the
claim that the missile was a Buk-M1, not used by the Russians but
modified by the Ukrainians. 



Meanwhile, relatives of the 38 Australian citizens and residents who
died in the crash are, like the rest of the world, still waiting for
credible answers. Hogue and other diplomats say the Abbott approach is
counterproductive and embarrassing. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov,
told the ABC the president was still to officially confirm his
participation in Brisbane. But there would definitely be an opportunity
to exchange views at the meeting, preferably he said, “in a more
diplomatic way”.



The prime minister seems to acknowledge his play for domestic
plaudits in this instance was at best inelegant, at worst demeaning. He
refused to repeat the “shirtfront” line when prompted by journalists.
But it is too late to prevent the Putin–Abbott showdown derailing one of
the most important summits to be held in this country. 



Ironically, the leading role Australia played in the Security Council
on MH17 came from the grace and favour of the Rudd government’s push to
gain a seat on the powerful body. A major component of that campaign
was hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to African countries to
garner their votes. The Abbott opposition, with a firm eye to the
domestic audience, slammed the bid as a waste of money. Australia’s
national interest was, in its view, closer to home. 



But West Africans haven’t forgotten Australia’s commitments to them.
The unfolding catastrophe wrought by the horrible Ebola virus has
claimed more than 4000 victims this year. Canberra has directed $18
million to the World Health Organisation’s efforts to contain the
disease. The United Nations is grateful but the president of Sierra
Leone, a front-line state bearing the brunt of the epidemic, says what’s
needed are “boots on the ground”.



President Ernest Bai Koroma has written to Abbott telling him further
support is needed to scale up his national response with education
efforts as well as infection control measures. Experts say that while
Ebola has a 70 per cent death rate, it can be relatively easily
controlled if properly quarantined.



“Having watched the response of the Australian military to similar
humanitarian emergencies, most recently Typhoon Haiyan in the
Philippines, I know that it is uniquely placed to help us in the fight
against Ebola,” he wrote. “We are counting on Australia to send us the
military personnel we so desperately need to fight back against the
virus and prevent the positive developments of the last 10 years from
being undone.”



Labor’s shadow health minister, Catherine King, says it’s time for
Australia to do more. She backs the Australian Medical Association’s
(AMA) call for urgent action. “As the AMA notes, the government has
well-trained Australian Medical Assistance Teams … that can rapidly
respond to crises like the Ebola crisis,” she said.



But this time, playing on the world stage is not so appealing to the
prime minister: “We aren’t going to send Australian doctors and nurses
into harm’s way without being absolutely confident that all of the risks
are being properly managed.”



Evacuation of affected Australian health workers is a major stumbling
block. The Public Health Association and the doctors find this reason
for rejecting more concrete assistance incredible. Britain and Germany
already have arrangements in place; if Canberra had the will it could
use them.



Maybe there are more votes in fighting Islamic extremists in
countries remote from Australia than there are in fighting disease. But
the AMA says the same logic applies. We are in the Middle East to
contain a terrorist threat. It argues we should be in West Africa to
contain a threat to world health. It points out that 750 people travel
from West Africa to Australia every year. Among them, heroes such as
Cairns volunteer Red Cross nurse Sue Ellen Kovack. She is still under
quarantine as a precaution for suspected Ebola.



The Abbott government, so keen to be in lockstep with Washington in
Iraq, is reluctant to follow its American ally into West Africa. The
Obama administration sees Ebola in international economic and security
terms. It has a similar view about climate change. Again there’s a
parting of the ways. 



For the first time in five years of G20 summits, climate change is
not on the core agenda. Labor’s former treasurer Wayne Swan attended
every one of those events. He told the Lowy Institute this week there is
anger and alarm within the international community at Australia’s
stance as the first nation to go backwards.



“In the corridors of Washington, Berlin and elsewhere, there is
genuine dismay about the lack of attention to climate change in the G20
agenda,” he said. 



Abbott thumbs his nose at such sentiments. “Coal is essential for the
prosperity of Australia,” he said at the opening of the Caval Ridge
mine in Queensland. “Energy is what sustains prosperity and coal is the
world’s principal energy source and it will be for many decades to
come.”



Never mind that the mine’s joint partners, BHP and Mitsubishi, are
busy diversifying into alternative energy sources with a firm eye to a
less carbon intensive future.



This prime minister is busy running lines prepared by the coal
industry and hardly, if ever, mentions the worth or potential of
Australia’s other natural riches, wind and solar. His scarcely concealed
agenda is to dismantle the renewable energy industry. So far only the
senate is standing in his way.



Swan says that “at best, Australia has gone from leader to laggard on
climate change. At worst it’s gone from lifter to leaner. And this at a
time when significant players such as the US and China are more willing
than ever to address climate change.”



Abbott is preparing to vanquish an old foe on a fading battleground.
He warns that Shorten’s Labor will bring back the “carbon tax”, threaten
jobs and hike electricity prices. He clearly believes by keeping his
head in the sand on climate change a majority of Australian voters will
join him with their buckets and spades on the beach. 



Shorten’s mettle will be tested but he won’t be gifting Abbott a
divided Labor Party and a leadership merry-go-round. Nor will he be
doing deals with doctrinaire Greens. 



He will need to convert into convincing arguments the overwhelming
consensus of the world’s scientists that the extreme weather we are
experiencing is tied to our unfettered use of fossil fuels.



It would be folly to underestimate this opposition leader. He has
Labor ahead in the polls. He goaded the prime minister into his foolish
Putin bravado and his exploitation of the government’s unsaleable budget
shows he can seize a political opportunity. 



Tony Abbott can ill afford too many more own goals.