WHO ARE WE NOW?
Australian politics - reading between the lines.
By Frances Harris
The Abbot government has just made a powerful statement in
the budget 2014, about how they regard their Australian citizens, and importantly
how they expect us to feel about each other.
Now for all you mothers and fathers who decided to live a
low income lifestyle due to your own poor career choices in life, don’t blame
the government when you can’t take all of your flu ridden family to the doctor
at once because of the seven dollar co-payment, and if you can’t return for the
results of the diagnostic tests and medication, it’s simple. Just pick out the
one who looks the sickest, maybe that looks like has pneumonia, excluding the
parents of course, and deal with them one at a time. All it takes is some
forward planning.
That, we are told is fiscally responsible, and if it happens
the disease is undiagnosed ‘bird flu,’ or some rare biology contracted from a
rich person who’s returned from overseas, just suck it up. You are doing this
for the Liberal Party, your country and the economic bottom line. I wonder how
Europe coped with the black plague or even the bubonic plague, in the eighteen
hundreds. Maybe we can take some guidance from what they did. There are lots of
old graves in the local cemetery that show how Australia managed the crisis. I
hope there is planning in this budget for the endless possibilities. Maybe the
new super research centre can find cures, in six or seven years’ time. We can
learn a lot from history.
Now with the expectation that the cost of getting a degree
at Australian Universities is likely to triple: - the age of entitlement for the rich has
arrived, again. Finally our government has gotten rid of all those poor people who
are taking away opportunities from the rich, because they won’t be able to pay
back their HEX debt in one lifetime. The way is free for anyone with money to
become a professional student; perhaps a parking spot for the errant young
adult, if you will. That is not to make less of the smart wealthy students who
deserve their place on the high stage. They should be applauded for their
abilities.
What about the war torn and abandoned people oversees, some without
food, medicine or shoes on their feet; who are in their plight through no fault
of their own? The government indicates; they can wait. We need to withdraw some
of their allocated budget for the paid parental scheme. Both are worthy causes,
and one can realise it is a statement about Australia’s place in the world and what
we think about the weak and vulnerable everywhere. We have an image to keep. The
apparent message from the government is: We aren’t prepared to take care of our
own weak and vulnerable shown in the new budget cuts, so why should we pay for
those in other countries? Life is about standing on your own two feet,
sometimes without shoes and a matching handbag.
Now that there are plans to slash staff at the Tax
department, I guess the retrenched staff won’t be transferred a bolstered Investigation
unit that tracks oversees money transferred to Monaco or the Swiss occasional bank
account. Six months will be good for the character, make them stronger.
And if it is you who happen to have a child who is
struggling to keep up at school and you don’t own a king’s ransom for tutors
and the like – just get used to it. This is good for all of us and good for the
country – right? We don’t want to be breeding a race of future dole bludging
welfare recipients.
So for the poor and needy in Australia, if we see you out on
the street with the begging bowl, because they are unable to keep a roof over
their heads, or put food on the table, we who have more have been encouraged
shut one eye as we pass you by and remember, it’s because this is good for
Australia. - We all have to share the pain equally.