Aussie Enviro
An Australian community for everything from your backyard to beyond the black stump.
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Topics may include Aussie plants and animals, environmental, farming, energy, and climate news and stories (mostly Aus specific), etc.
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Australian Youth Climate Coalition
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A couple of interesting developments this week:
At what point do we decide that neither side of politics is doing us any good?
Looka a lot like Albanese has
I think a lot of people have decided that and it's reflected in rise of the Greens, some progressive independents and the mixed bag that is the teals. One of the main issues is that it's mostly confined to electoral politics so nothing really happens in between. There's a lot of activist campaigning and organising but the campaigns and groups behind all the activity are still a bit disconnected politically and sometimes even socially.
One thing to keep in mind is that it's objectively better to have Labor in government over anything to the right of Labor. Labor is in general more socially progressive than anything to it's right based on a lot of its support base being actual workers, regardless of how conservative many of those workers may be.
The recent big Palestine solidarity protests were only as big as they were because a lot of Labor supporters/unions first broke ranks to join the Harbour Bridge protest and then the party as a whole finally got the memo after Albo declared the government's intention to recognise Palestine. Labor members have been protesting for Palestine since Oct 7 but Labor as a whole has not mobilized around the issue like it has with other national campaigns when it came late to the party (work choices, East Timor etc).
This pattern is reflected throughout many social and political issues. Labor as a whole doesn't really move unless it comes from the top. At the moment the top is captured by neoliberal ideologues and has been since Hawke. If this were to change everything to the left of Labor could be dwarfed by how many more people Labor could bring into action to work on social and political change compared to the entire left of Labor as a whole. This scenario seems highly unlikely though.
Welcome to the lonely club of understanding the LibLab uniparty. With kind regards from the Westminster system.
After genociding the First Nations, drawing some arbitrary lines in the Middle East, enabling the current genocide, you’ve got to wonder if the Brits did anything that wasn’t fucked up.
In a way the current aussie LibLab situation is a direct descendant of the UKs only export program: Divide and Conquer™.
As long as we still are behaving like a colony with massive daddy issues, I doubt much will change. Oh, look there’s the climate emergency, turns out we ran out of time.