geonuc wrote:Gillard was certainly controversial, but was she a bad PM, as PM's go?
Canada has a Prime Minister???geonuc wrote:Bah. What do I expect from a media that serves a populace that can't even name the prime minister of Canada.
geonuc wrote:Hmmm. I don't know. Given the state of things in the world what with seemingly more and more people trusting in their vision of a god rather than science, I might just want an atheist in office no matter her other flaws. But I don't know enough about Australian politics to weigh in with any authority.
SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:Hmmm. I don't know. Given the state of things in the world what with seemingly more and more people trusting in their vision of a god rather than science, I might just want an atheist in office no matter her other flaws. But I don't know enough about Australian politics to weigh in with any authority.
An atheist who is against gay marriage because it's not natural.
SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:Hmmm. I don't know. Given the state of things in the world what with seemingly more and more people trusting in their vision of a god rather than science, I might just want an atheist in office no matter her other flaws. But I don't know enough about Australian politics to weigh in with any authority.
An atheist who is against gay marriage because it's not natural.
FZR1KG wrote:The two parties are more about trying to get certain classes votes, working man party vs middle class/business party.
They should just be honest and call the Liberal party, "the big business party".
The other is pretty deceitful too, its called the labour party. It should be called the "we bend over to corrupt unions so they can screw workers party".
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Well, the brits seem to find you aussies perplexing.....
FZR1KG wrote:One of the reasons is that Australians have a free society and really don't have a fear of losing it.
The fear of losing freedoms is a minority and they aren't even taken seriously enough to be vocal.
So a party that pushes individual freedoms would not get very far.
I can just imagine the response of the public if a party started pushing the freedom line during elections like here in the USA.
The overwhelming response would be, "We're not free? Really? So communist Australia allows you to run for elections then does it? Bunch of bloody wankers".
End of the party.
squ1d wrote:At the end of the day though, whichever chump was at the helm of the Labor party, that is who I would vote for, because I would rather eat my own intestines than vote for LNP/Tony Abbott.
FZR1KG wrote:squ1d wrote:At the end of the day though, whichever chump was at the helm of the Labor party, that is who I would vote for, because I would rather eat my own intestines than vote for LNP/Tony Abbott.
You and me both.
Hopefully Abbott loses the election for the Liberal party just like Beasley did for the Labour party.
squ1d wrote:Australians believe in giving everyone a 'fair go' and they aren't worried that doing so will somehow magically diminish their own personal liberties. They find America's focus on small government and rugged individualism perplexing.
As an Australian, I disagree with a lot of what is written here. Gillard's downfall was not due to misogyny, nor does misogyny run deep in Australia. When Gillard was first appointed prime minister she was celebrated across Australia as our first female prime minister. Her polls were very high. Her popularity did not fall because of her gender; it fell because of broken promises.
Each of the examples of sexism set out in the article did occur but each was loudly and universally condemned by the Australian community. Surely, the test of sexism in a community is not whether isolated sexist comments are made, but how the community responds to them. Approaching it this way, Australia is far from a sexist place.
Yes, Gillard was subject to serious criticism and abuse, but so is every prime minister of Australia. Like the US, politics is a tough game for all involved. The previous conservative prime minister was called a 'lying rodent'. . . by members of his own party! Isolated examples of sexist abuse levelled at a prime minister were simply that - it is a mistake to read more into it.
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