Tuesday 29 January 2008

Liberals are never sorry - or responsible

"Dr Nelson said he personally had a "bit of concern about the idea of one generation being responsible" for the past." http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/opposition-slams-planned-apology/2008/01/28/1201369037426.html

This pretty much says it all about Dr Nelson! Funny that the Liberal Party has had no trouble taking credit for our ancestors 'good' deeds. John Howard waxed lyrical about the 'diggers' spirit, for example, intimating that it formed the Australian character, along with the 'fair go', which has been largely mythical but, nonetheless, grew out of the past. There are many examples of the Liberals playing these games, so Dr Nelson is continuing the 'tradition' of all credit and no blame that was so much a feature of John Howard's tenure (see previous article "Is John Howard actually God?", 12 November 07).

Tony Abbott (a truly 'painful' man) has run true to form with his comment, reported in the same Age article, that an apology would reinforce the 'victim mentality'. Please! What reinforces the sense of being victimised is being victimised. Can the Liberal Party find no portfolio where this man doesn't get the chance to demonstrate his lack of humanity?

Dr Nelson also reportedly said: "You have to ask yourself … whether that is the most important issue that's facing Australia when we've seen a decline in the share market, home interest rates go up, petrol get more expensive and a basket full of groceries harder to fill".

Many things come to mind about this comment but I confine myself to two. First, are we capable of paying attention to only one thing at a time? How does a government run if that's the case because our world is obviously more complex than that. Secondly, Dr Nelson demonstrates Liberal priorities yet again (and a lamentable habit of assuming we all think the same way he does and of pushing people's 'fear/selfish' buttons) with all the important issues being about money and none about the quality of our society.

Did being thrown out of government teach them nothing about the values Australians want their leaders to foster?

2 comments:

  1. The Libs are thinking of backing the apology! It looks like political expediency may trump their deeply held convictions. Former PM Howard has indicated he will not travel to parliament to hear the apology. That’s a big loss, right there…

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  2. Oh, indeed, a big loss. In his absence, however, we have the Leader of the Opposition, Brendan Nelson, carrying the torch for him. His speech was about excusing those who participated, even though he deplored the emotional effects on those forcibly removed. He defended the Howard interventions, going on to talk about the problems that intervention was meant to deal with. He has no sense of what the apology day was all about. What a mean spirit it showed, in my view.

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