Dignity. Rights. Education.

Thanks to Jaycee for this excellent thread-starter … which I only edited a tiny bit …

(Image Credit: Kalanchoe sp, Freedom Bells)

I have put this piece up without ANY editing for syntax, grammar or clarity of structure. I accept there are some typos, there are grammatical gaffes and some weakness in layout etc. I do this not because I am proud of my grammatical failings, they will always be there, my lousy education guarantees THAT! I do this because it must be realized that there are many who would like to contribute, to post articles, but are sometimes a tad awed by the prospect of judgement not on their opinions, but on their writing. There are many who do post here with admirable skill more accomplished than myself … Ian, GD, Fiona, BB, Aguirre, Kambah Mick, Puff, Leone2, Janice, and others (and I apologise for missing any, but you and we know you!) but I feel there are others who lurk here and who post commentary that would have bloody good yarns and stories to tell. I myself left high school after the second year to go into trade and never sat for another academic exam till my forty sixth year … and then it was touch and go! And THIS TOO is the Labor story … that those who have worked their way through life, perhaps raised a family, developed a trade, profession or business or are on PAYE employment, can draw from their own experiences and pass them on to a listening audience without fear of ridicule and rest assured that what they do pass on will be woven also into the Greater Labor story.

Death by a Thousand Cuts: Living by a Simple Philosophy

Or: “Old Ideas, New Australians”

(Image Credit: Fairfax)

1983 … Business … of Survival

With the Death of Richard, I must now manage alone, on one pension.

The house seems in good condition. No large account, only the small loan I had taken out, which finishes in June 1985. Must try not to take out anymore loans, to [sic] much drain on my low income.

I must try to live on produce from garden, with eggs to help out.

Try to cut down on weekly food bills, most of all on meat.

The animals take quite a lot (money) for food, reg, etc.

As the fowls are all getting old, must breed up some new hens.

That was from an aged pensioner’s diary … sure, we know she was not going to die of hunger or homelessness – or do we? She certainly was afraid of some vague uncertainty … and therein lies the simple truth:
A lifetime of habit, creates a certainty of belief a moment of uncertainty doubts a lifetime of belief.

For that lady, her entire life was constructed around hard work … the old-age pension that Labor and the unions put in place gave her a measure of security so she could live out her final years in dignity. That is a word well worth praising: Dignity. Let’s put that up there at the top of the page of Labor principles.

DIGNITY

(Image Credit: Ex-ceed)

And damn if a person who applies their person to contribute toward the social betterment of their family, friends and neighbours for their working life, they are denied that most basic of respects: Dignity! and it only comes from others who have walked that same path. The speculator, always on the make, always on the lookout for the next “win”, the next “deal”, has neither wish nor capacity for dignity … he has traded it away with a Faustian deal with capital … no need to look to him for a “fair go”, his motto is “Opportunity” … but does he seriously believe that if HE did not exist, there would be no work to do?

(Actually, the name that lady called her late husband was not quite correct … you see, his name really was Riccardo. He was an Italian … SHE was born in Australia of Irish / Cornish stock – now, THERE’S a mix! But you know, it is not at all uncommon – of the three sisters in that lady’s family, after the war, one married an Italian, one married a German (third generation Australian) and the third a Polish man. This idea that we are just lately become a multicultural nation is not true. For many years there has been intermarriage in the community … sure, the surnames may be Anglo, but there is mixed ethnicity in the family somewhere, and we should be proud of this … love knows no boundaries, children know no race.)

I keep hearing this catch-cry: ”What does Labor stand for?” To my mind, Labor stands for what it was raised for a simple measure of dignity … in work, in leisure, in the fair go for all people. I remember when I was about ten years old, with my older brother, selling newspapers at the Royal Show. The manager would allocate you so many papers for the day, you’d sell them, putting all the coins into a leather bag at your hip and at the end of the day, you’d give the bag over to that manager. He’d count out what you owed for the papers and any over (you’d get tips, but most times didn’t have the time to separate the tip from the coinage) incl’ tips he’d give back to you along with your pay. But there was this one big bastard manager one year, who’d keep back most of your tips. My older brother, being a stroppy sort of young fellow, challenged him (my brother was canny enough to keep a careful watch on his tips) and the manager got angry, saying, ”If you don’t like the way I do things, you can get off with yourself!” … and THAT included me. So a thirteen and a ten year old couple of kids get cheated by an unscrupulous manager (News Limited, by the way!) – nothing new, neither then nor now! .McDonald’s do it all the time – it’s called cheap labour – but to cheat kids … what sort of people are these? Vermin who steal the rights of their fellows. Labor with the unions, stand up for those rights Let’s put that up on the list.

RIGHTS

(Image Credit: Right Now)

And damn if a person applies their advantageous position to cheat even paper-boys … what sort of bastards are we up against? And they ask what does Labor stand for? Labor stands for what it was raised to stand for … the Rights of the everyday people to stop the vermin from ripping off the wages of ALL people and to bestow on ALL of us what Gough Whitlam called for and what Labor calls for now: “A fair go”.

Labor must think carefully before they pass these new “security laws” put up by Brandis. They are not to protect us from “terrorism”, but are deliberately being put in place to track and control our own citizens … it is as obvious as the nose on your face. There has to be a measure of restraint in how far we go to cow and threaten the populace. There has to be a measure of dignity and rights in our confrontation of any threat. Better we offer safe harbour to the majority of whom have been driven from their homelands in fear of their lives or livelihood, like those three men-folk above, than attempt to cow and oppress a minority for little more than their own particular culture.

Now read these comments and tell me they are irrelevant today:

As rivers glisten in different colours, but a common sewer everywhere looks like itself, so the all-powerful rule of capital ruined the middle class, raised trade and corporate agriculture to the highest prosperity, and ultimately led to a – hypocritically whitewashed – moral and political corruption of the nation.”

And:

“The leisure class lives by the industrial community rather than in it. Its relations to industry are of a financial rather than an industrial kind. Admission to the class is gained by exercise of the financial aptitudes—aptitudes for acquisition rather than for serviceability. There is, therefore, a continued selective sifting of the human material that makes up the leisure class, and this selection proceeds on the ground of fitness for financial pursuits.”

Both the above pieces are over one hundred years old The first by Theodor Mommsen on ancient Rome, the second by Thorsten Veblen on post-Victorian capitalism … yet they could both have been written today. Why is it that such rational observations go unheeded in our society? I read such and take them in and use them (as you see here) as moral and ethical fodder in my own life. Where do we see such civilized observations used widely? I don’t know! I don’t hear or see it in everyday life! Where is the scholarly debate among political higher learning in this nation? Education abandoned – that’s where. Let’s put that word up there too

EDUCATION

(Image Credit: Workforce Planning Tools)

And damn if the multitude of tomes of wisdom that have been written in the tears of humanity over millennium get abandoned for stupid, facile, quick-fix slogans. What sort of people are these who, flaunting their higher education, claim the high ground of public debate, yet cannot or will not learn from history and will not read from the wisdom of the ages? There are those who cannot claim education beyond the third year high school, who read and revere such books … their shelves a proud display of well-thumbed volumes. And some ask what should Labor stand for? Education … Labor stands for what it was raised for – Education for ALL peoples – not the abandonment of an age of learning but education.

The many different ethnic groups that come to these shores, from the earliest to the latest, have one goal in mind: ”Betterment” of their family fortunes, their security and their children’s education. It is that simple … sure ( and I mean no disrespect, only metaphor) they brought their metwurst and salami and tabouli and prayers with them – that is their immediate security – we all take a bit of “home” when we go on holiday. When one is driven in haste and fear from one’s house, what would YOU grab? a piece, any piece of home? That is what “culture “ is … a little piece of the past to carry with oneself into the future. In the worst case, it could be but a poem, a prayer, a song from the motherland … in the best case it is the family. How can one reject the call of assistance – not charity – assistance to a family in need and still shelter under the common name of humanity?

So there are the players, there are the situations … we know what the problems are today … what can be the solution?

Check this little piece from a short story by Eric Knight; see if it gives you ideas:

Never Come Monday

The Prime Minister thought of a lot of things all at once. Suddenly he called his secretary and said:

“Carrington-Smaithe. It is Sunday to-day, I hear, and it will be Sunday again tomorrow. Pack my things. We’re going away for the weekend.”

“But sir,” said the secretary “What about the international crisis? We have two ultimatums that must be answered immediately.”

“Dear me”, said the Prime Minister. “That is a nuisance, but all the world knows the British weekend is inviolate, and if this be Sunday, as it seems to me it must be, then I won’t be able to answer till the weekend is over.”

“But when will it stop being Sunday, sir?”

“Well, Carrington-Smaithe, how long will it take our fastest cruiser squadron to get around to that troublesome part of the world?”

“Oh, about thirty-six more hours, sir.”

“Hmmmph! Then I think it will stop being Sunday in about thirty-six more hours.”

There is a secret desire in that little piece of the realization of reality (it is well worth a read, by the way), a desire that is really a need for time off from work. But it can be more than that … it can be the barricade between capital demand and producer compliance, a demarcation line between demand and supply. I have never liked sacrificing my weekends for overtime, ever! Damn their work! No-one should be compelled to work on the weekend, and if they must, as in the emergency services then they ought to be suitably – VERY SUITABLY – rewarded. Work will be around a long time after we are ALL dead and gone! And there can be the solution to differentiating Labour from Capital … the inviolate weekend the compulsory time off for R & R. For as long as one stays healthy, one can always earn money … but time is of the essence. You will run out of time before you run out of money. Take the time; screw the money – let capital know it has no price for your free time. And they still ask what Labor stands for … Labor stands for what it was raised for … honouring the eight hour day or its modern equivalent, honouring “family time”, personal time, resting time. Those who would try to reduce the vulnerable to a kind of 24hr. slavery would love to claim ownership of the whole of our weekend … bugger them! They can’t have it!

The solution is that WE who are the producers, the consumers, the life and breath of business, take control of our working lives. WE draw a demarcation line between being compelled to work and a time for life. WE stop the machine for a pause in production so we can enjoy our family and friendships. I say WE take back our lives and deny the vermin their pound of flesh! It has never been the speculator who physically laid the “foundations”, never the stock-broker who mixed the “mortar”, never the wealthy who carried the hod of bricks to build our house. They don’t own it, they don’t own us – they OWE us!

THAT is Labor policy: Dignity, Rights, Education – and what flows automatically from those simple entitlements. Stake your ground, claim your rights and serve your people.

“The quality of mercy is not strain’d.
It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
Upon the place beneath. It is twice blest:
It blesseth him that gives and him that takes.”

683 thoughts on “Dignity. Rights. Education.

  1. This is insane

    The presiding officers – the Speaker and the President – have made a ruling on the burqa. Those wearing facial coverings will only be allowed in enclosed galleries – which are those spaces where there is glass between the chambers and the viewers.

    Photographic identification is required for the issue of escorted passes for all adult visitors. Procedures are in place to ensure that DPS Security manage any cultural or religious issues relating to this in a sensitive and appropriate manner; and
    Persons with facial coverings entering the galleries of the House of Representatives and Senate will be seated in the enclosed galleries. This will ensure that persons with facial coverings can continue to enter the Chamber galleries, without needing to be identifiable.

    So, anyone with evil intent can do it to it to her heart’s content so long as she doesn’t do it in the presence of the pollies.

  2. What a load of bulldust. I don’t think anyone has ever seen a burqa in Canberra, maybe the Canberra residents here can set us straight on any sightings. Hardly any Muslim women in the place wear niqabs. Those calling for a ban do not even understand the difference between burqas, niqabs and hijabs.

    Canberra Islamic Centre president Azra Khan said women made a personal choice to wear the burqa and public debate over a ban on the garment had been brought in "where it really didn't fit".

    "My view is that Parliament House is obviously a very important place to all Australians and to exclude entry on the basis of dress is very discriminatory, so I think we're getting into dangerous territory here," she said.

    She had only ever observed a handful of women wearing the garment in the ACT.

    That observation was echoed by Diana Abdel-Rahman, from Australian Muslim Voice Radio, who had never seen a burqa in the capital.

    "There is a huge difference between the niqab and the burqa, and I have never seen one in Canberra."

    http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/canberra-muslims-say-parliament-house-burqa-ban-would-be-discriminatory-20141001-10on29.html#ixzz3ExiGE74G

    This whole farce is designed for one purpose – to reinforce the ‘evil Muslims’ campaign this rotten government is running. It disgusts me.I wish someone would organise a ‘visit Parliament House wearing a burqa’ campaign, swamping that enclosed room every sitting day with burqa-clad women.

  3. Fiona

    The Tauregs are a bit reversed when it comes to men and women customarily covering heads/faces

  4. Ducky,
    I thought that appliance is/was a ‘birko’ – used to have one many moons ago and the picture you posted reminds me of it and the day of its demise when I was using it for something and the (Darwin) earthquake happened. I had grabbed No.1 son who was only a month or so old
    and high-tailed it downstairs to stand in the middle of the yard, watching the power poles swaying and feeling the earth rolling beneath my feet. Only lasted a matter of seconds, but I soon discovered all the neighbours had done the same. When I went back inside, I discovered the birko had boiled dry and melted, leaving a nice burned patch on the bench top.

  5. Good

    Bill Shorten is addressing a matter of public importance on “the dangers of prejudice and the importance of social cohesion in modern Australia”.

    In the chamber the member for Cronulla – or rather the wider area of Cook – Scott Morrison is answering on the Shorten on the MPI.

    Integration is a word one should never surrender….integration is about participation and when people participate we see the success.

    Integration? Obviously diversity is anathema to Snot.

  6. Janice,

    It is a Birko. I think we still have one hanging around the place, a silver coloured one.

  7. CTar1,

    You are going to hear more about it as long as the Bernardis and Days are around.

  8. So burqa wearing types are soooo dangerous they must be “caged”………………………………..with school kids. Won’t somebody think of the children !!!? .FFS.

  9. Someone should arrange a burka protest, about thousand or so people male and females with paper bag burkas visiting aph at the same time.

  10. I don’t known why people have problem with a Burqa. It is part of Australian history. Every schoolchild knows about Burqa N Dwills.

  11. So as we all head off into the night, I will leave you with Husic’s short speech just before question time. He was one of many who spoke on tolerance but his has that extra punch for his lived experience.

    “The times that test us all are not the times to test the trust between ourselves.

    Because it is at this point that we seek a stronger embrace of the many, around the things we all hold dear in this nation.

    At this moment our values and way of life are challenged – by those who hope to see fear and distrust weaken faith in our ourselves and our values.

    This challenge does not just test us as a collective – it tests us to push beyond the individual discomfort that may on occasion arise from the unfamiliar.

    To recognise that in doing so we grow and gain strength.
    It should not slip from recognition that those who came to these shores to make a new home feel a deep debt of gratitude.

    They seek to repay this debt by building upon that we have found and benefitted from. Their children inherit and honour that debt.

    Not just for the sake of material prosperity and self-advancement – but to become advocates of a grander vision of this country; benefiting from the inclusion derived from a shared commitment to freedom, the rule of law and respect of others.

    In the brief time I’ve been humbled to be here, I’ve sought to appreciate that differences shouldn’t define or divide.

    It’s been an honour to work with those of you who feel the same.

    Together let us make this place a source of strength for others outside this place.
    It was a guardian of our national values, Sir John Monash, who remarked that one of the many attributes of a successful leader is a personality that “must be of a kind which inspires confidence in others.”

    In those past words are a course for future acts.”

    Good night.

  12. My wife saw a lady in a niqab at Belconnen Mall today. I don’t recall seeing a burqa or niqab in Canberra, myself.
    The hijab is common enough, though. One of the carers at my daughter’s daycare/preschool wears one, as does a lady who works just across the floor from me.

  13. In 51 years in Canberra I have not seen anyone in a burqa. OH says she has seen one.

  14. Nearly 40 years in Canberra – no burqas! I work in an organisation that has lots of overseas Students – hijabs (some quite lovely) seem to be their choice. What a fuss about nothing – typical – when/where will it end!

  15. 7.5 totally lost it about the Muslim ladies’ covering.

    They kept talking about burqas and had footage of niqabs in the background. You had to wait till the very end for Sabra Lane to explain the difference.

  16. I remember once in the late 80’s, getting off the country train at Spencer St Station, a man and woman standing on the platform. What was striking was they were both tall, (I’m 4ft 10 1/2 ins) but even so they were very tall. They were both dressed in black. The woman was covered from top of the head to the ground, but I could tell she was looking at the train even though I could not see her face. I was very impressed. I guess this is what all the fuss is about. I am a country girl, don’t get to see difference much except in Melbourne, I am always fascinated by the huge variety of people and clothes they wear. I have never felt threatened by any of them.

    This whole thing totally disgusts me. Many of us knew, or suspected, that this is the behavior that this toxic government would exhibit. Every time I think they’d reached the end of the bottomless pit they go even further. They achieved the destruction of Australia’s naivety, we are no longer innocents in a big bad world, we are becoming the big bad world.

  17. The Drum is currently running a poll on the banning of the burqa and niqab in Parliament House. 66% (1200 votes counted) in favour. Frightening !

  18. Peta told him about the venom against the ban and told him to be “against” it. What happens when the shit dies down? Who knows.

  19. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/11134801/Nick-Griffin-expelled-from-BNP.html

    http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/johnmcternan1/100288488/nick-griffin-time-may-be-over-but-we-know-exactly-where-bnp-voters-have-gone/

    http://www.canberratimes.com.au/world/joko-widodo-faces-uphill-battle-as-opponents-secure-key-positions-in-indonesias-parliament-20141002-10pe6j.html

    http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2014/10/hong-kongs-pro-democracy-movement-challenge-all-asias-autocrats

    http://gnh.net.au/

  20. Leroy,

    Next #melbwonkdrinks is tomorrow night, Friday from 5pm onwards at http://gnh.net.au/ – Stay alert, alarmed, and tipsy among friends.

    Damn!

    Please pretty please, a slightly longer heads-up for the next session!

  21. One might almost wonder if this whole media beat-up is to make Abbott look more like a strong leader by giving him something to ‘take a stand’ about… if one were cynical, that is. Something like this:

    1. Have usual suspects make rwnj comments to msm.
    2. Wait several days for usual suspects in msm to whip up ‘outrage’ (conveniently taking spotlight off minor issues like the crashing economy), meanwhile dogwhistling to community rwnj’s for support.
    3. At height of confected controversy, have Mr Abbott step in with ‘authority’.
    4. *expected tomorrow* MSM produces gushing screeds about what a ‘strong leader’ Mr Abbott is.

    One might however consider that an actual strong leader wouldn’t have let the rwnj’s in stage 1 off their leashes in the first place.

  22. You know, it is truly terrible when one hears about these knee-jerk laws and one’s creative impulse is to fight them by starting to wear either a paper bag over my head, with a burqa grid cut into it, or a big yellow star on my sleeve, just to “godwin” the various stupidities of these political numb-skulls and their media claques.

    Why can’t Australia use the laws we already have against criminals and criminal behaviours instead of making a great big fuss over these folk and making them into ‘sexy bad guys’?

  23. Curioz,

    Why can’t Australia use the laws we already have against criminals and criminal behaviours instead of making a great big fuss over these folk and making them into ‘sexy bad guys’?

    Because

    (1) it wouldn’t allow the regime to look as though it was doing something BIG AND IMPORTANT;

    (2) it wouldn’t allow the regime to look as though it REALLY CARED;

    (3) it wouldn’t allow the regime’s Leader to look BIG, IMPORTANT, and CARING; and

    (4) if “these folk” are provoked into foolish actions, it will allow the regime and the regime’s Leader to look SERIOUSLY WISE.

  24. socksfullofsand

    Oh it has worked on Patricia Kavalas, she was outraged at first and is now purring what a great leader he is. I don’t follow her on twitter but someone was retweeting her comments.

  25. *wryly amused* In other words there are people who claim to be in charge of this country who actually want to big note themselves but who actually have very small … attributes?

    Explains why every time I see images of one particular politician in a suit, even when standing next to Really Important People From Other Countries, my brain substitutes the memory of little red speedoes, a hairy chest and a silly little hat *sighs*

    ‘Tis a worry.

  26. Gravel,

    I really wish Ms Karvelas’s autobiography was available. I suspect it would tell us more about her than she’d like us to know.

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