On Seriousness
Somewhere, right now, a silver haired grown man who spent most of his life wearing shoes that need polishing, slacks and shirts that need ironing is doomscrolling a feed of bullshit tik-tok-esque videos via youtube or facebook's knock-off tik-tok functionality.
His age wearied eyes lock onto a bullshit video that temporarily halts the swiping of his gnarled thumb. In the video short videos of people falling over or throwing a bottle so it rotates through the air and lands on its end are intercut with a "content creator" performing a "face journey" as though he is looking over there and seeing a cat sneeze only to next look over there and see a kid ride along the top of a fence on his bmx.
Juvenile, childish bullshit too readily dismissed as "harmless fun" when there is no longer anyone in our lives to regulate how much "harmless fun" we imbibe when we cannot regulate it ourselves.
So look over there > corporate cringe. And look over there > activist emoting. And now... look over there > sensationalist news. And take a peek at this > The Dutton lead coalition campaign. And take a closer look > Amelia Hamer's campaign for the seat of Kooyong.
The Liberal party had held the seat of Kooyong since basically forever. It was the seat of longest serving Prime Minister Robert Menzies. In 2010 this "safe" seat was given to candidate Josh Frydenberg:
Fresh faced at 31 in 2014 |
Tim Smith was also, somewhat well credentialed. When his face appeared on posters in my local streets, I was frankly offended to be offered such an inoffensive nothingburger of a candidate and back in 2014 Liberals winning in Kooyong/Kew was pretty much a given.
By the time Josh Frydenberg became the first sitting federal Treasurer, and first Liberal party candidate to lose the seat of Kooyong ever, Kooyong also had birthed something else: A serious candidate to run against an incumbent Liberal in the form of Dr. Monique Ryan who as at writing, looks to be retaining her seat.
By my reading, which is by no means authoritative, Kew and Kooyong were functioning as places regarded as so predetermined to vote for the Australian conservative party that these were seats given to young prospects to feed a pipeline of future cabinet members and leaders, which both parties have/had around the country.
The incumbent is a serious person, and so naturally the Liberal's preselected:
A profoundly unserious candidate. Amelia Hamer, and knowing nothing else, which I had documented in a draft post, that I had no idea of her family connection to a former Victorian Premier for which the Melbourne Arts Center's Hamer Hall is named.
Amelia has not yet risen to the wikipedia standards of significance such that I have any idea how old she is. I've seen some journalism suggesting that she was preselected because the party thought she might appeal to younger voters. This must be qualified with a general observation that the virtual annihilation of the Liberal Party (in particular) demonstrates that Australian journalists, are among the least informed of the Australian population. The second mandatory qualifier, is that the Liberal party's appeal to young voters is not a matter of the candidates, but the party.
I will give anyone a chance, and Amelia's chance was a flyer that I read on the train into the CBD and deposited in a recycling bin having studied its "content" thoroughly. It was by my analysis the most profoundly unserious attempt at advertising I came across. As were the ads Youtube bombarded me with of Amelia Hamer saying pretty much nothing of any substance or consequence.
While Dr. Monique's ads were not exactly profound, they at least outlined her policy positions, what she'd accomplished in her first term and that she was a doctor, who had left an important position producing social goods to seriously contest a seat that had been held continuously by one party since 1945.
By contrast I learned that Amelia was born here, and worked in banking - an industry that no longer produces social goods and is mostly engaged in arbitrage.
Beyond that, Amelia's case consisted of claiming to be a "Strong voice for Kooyong" despite having nothing to say, and also being a member of a major party with a whip or whatever that means the people of Kooyong whatever their concerns about climate change in an affluent Eastern suburb of Melbourne Victoria, will produce not a peep when it comes to building a massive coal mine in regional Queensland because the party needs them seats.
There was also the, well, actually informative party campaign slogan "Get Australia Back on Track" though you know, what track? When did we come off it? How get? When back? The information though tells us that the Liberals have shifted from a conservative party, if they ever truly have been, to an unspecified nostalgia party.
For me, it is very unserious to simply present oneself as standing for something, if you have no way of explaining how it is to be done. Like, let's just try to imagine this in the context of the cost of living crisis - how will the Liberal party, particularly fresh faced Amelia Hamer get the cost of living "back on track?"
Well, this presumably involves going somehow back to a time when the cost of living was much lower, I would be inclined to pick something like the early 70s. This was when industrialized nations around the globe had powerful labour movements. Growth in production resulted in growth in real wages. People could afford housing with a single blue-collar income, with house prices being a single digit multiple of median wages.
How is any serious person to seriously conceive of how the Australian Liberal party would achieve even a move towards such a state? It is simply impossible.
By having the opportunity to observe behaviour, I believe I was able to make a more accurate inference from the "Back on Track" campaign slogan, for one it reeks of a conference room meeting where a bunch of hacks brainstorm up ways to rephrase "Make America Great Again" only slightly better than a complete hack in the form of Clive Palmer wasting all his money rebranding his party as the TRUMPet of Patriots, and brainstorming up the campaign slogan "Make Australia Great Again"
But, if there was culture war issues on the agenda, I didn't fucking notice any outside of Clive Palmer's Trumpet of Patriots, who polling told me was tracking far behind One Nation, whom I heard not a peep out of.
So I assume, or infer, that by "Back on Track" the Liberals mean the track that leads to an asset rather than work based economy with growing wealth inequality and rising cost of living by redistributing the tax burden downward and public wealth (government assets) into the private sector.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not so uncynical that I think Labour will have much success turning our economic ship around, at least not in one term. But on that hand, "Building Australia's Future" while also seeming like a hackey refrasing of Hillary's "Stronger together" and Biden's "build back better" or whatever, is at least a refinement, and so likely all most voters needed in this election was "the vibe" that I think sunk the Voice Referendum in 2023.
Enter then the narrative fallacy. Which I believe Nicholas Nassim Taleb first understood the fallacy for himself, by observing the same story told by a news channel to explain two equal and opposite phenomena. As evidence, here is reelected PM Anthony Albanese's somehow editorial view: "Australians show there’s something they care about more than cost of living":
The opposition and some others in this campaign appear to have forgotten a basic truth about Australian voters: they reject divisive politics, they will not be fooled by culture wars, they do not endorse hatred or division. ~ "The Age's View"
It is a narrative fallacy insofar as this "basic truth" also must explain the opposite outcome of 2023's "The Voice" referendum. Unless we categorize the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island Voice to Parliament as an artefact of the culture wars, intended to fool the Australian public, a tool of hatred or division.
The referendum was even more decisive than the ALPs victory over the weekend, and without being able to breach the paywall, I cannot see PM Albanese's argument. For example, as at writing not only was the Liberal party repudiated by urban election results, but also the Greens. One Nation and Trumpet of Patriots garnered a combined 8% of the National vote, more than the combined Independent vote.
It is just my opinion, but I think this election result is best explained by the timing - the Trump Tariff wars, which serve as a global reminder that elections are consequential to the household and a vote should be taken seriously.
Do I believe Australian voters took their vote seriously? No. Not consciously. I think they just built a strong naive association between voting conservative and economic mismanagement, just as late last year around the time Biden/Kamela were ousted, the US voters built up a naive association between inflation and the incumbents, here is a good video of a comedian interviewing George Monbiot referring to a likely debunked finding that shark attacks effected the outcome of a New Jersey election in 1916 and keeping in mind that George Monbiot is a) a journalist, b) graduated from Oxford in zoology and c) cited a debunked example - the point in my opinion still stands.
For example, the Liberal Party was fairly summarily expelled from the cities. In my seat of Kooyong it voted 69.8% "yes" to changing the Australian Constitution to require by law a body to be called "The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders Voice" as recognition of ATSI as the "First Peoples" of Australia that could make "representations" to Parliament on matters concerning ATSI peoples. But likely because of some rezoning to bring Toorak into the electorate, it as at writing may be one of two urban seats the Liberal party may capture.
Which makes the "devisive politics" narrative unable to explain the two opposite phenomena. Certainly in the seat of Goldstein that has been lost by a teal independent to the Liberal Party, it does not explain why they would be 56.2% in favour of The Voice and less than 1% in favour of returning to a representative of the party that withdrew its support of the Voice and likely tanked all chance of its passing. (Certainly much more so than my blog posts as to why I couldn't bring myself to vote yes, which were read by roughly 60 people and likely persuaded nobody.)
So I offer an alternative narrative, that only stretches as far as Kooyong and Goldstein, and cannot explain for example, why Adam Bandt leader of the Greens party lost his seat of Melbourne to the ALP. These two lonely islands of electoral seats in an urban setting that are less than 1% in favour of the Liberal party after incredible spending by the party to regain the seats, were likely decided by the issue of land tax. This narrative will not be popular, because land tax is a state policy decision, not federal however, it is only as irrational as voters turning on an incumbent party because of inflation and the RBA interest rates.
In the same way that median/modal Australian's obligatorily leveraged to their eyeballs speculating on property prices, gets angry when the RBA doesn't give them their entitlement of low interest rates in perpetuity, the affluent residents of Melbourne's inner east and bayside south, whom own multiple properties, including beach houses, country houses etc. for which in Victoria they pay a penalty vacancy land tax, are outraged by this, and for some reason, think the federal representative can do something about the fact that they may have to offload at a massive capital gain, their tying up of scarce and unproductive assets.
Now the linked article is from an ultra-left media source in the UK, where along with raging marxist lefties they a) have a tax policy toward housing speculation that looks like utopian idealism compared to Australia's with negative gearing and capital gains concessions, and b) have all these useful terms of art that Australian's simply do not use because there is no media will like "Buy-to-let" though c) such a term would be somewhat inaccurate to describe Australian property investors, who too often, buy property with no intention of letting it to anyone at all. "Buy-to-flip" and "Buy-to-develop-into-a-piece-of-shit-and-then-flip" are more likely terms.
The pertinent passage for the Kooyong-Goldstein narrative is this:
Being a landlord is not a job. Operating as a buy-to-let landlord means taking a property off the housing market and then allowing someone who needs a home to pay the mortgage on it – with the wages of their work.
Landlords, then, don’t create housing stock. They don’t create anything – except perhaps anxiety and anger among tenants, often paying huge amounts for substandard, damp and unsafe accommodation. This is why money made from ‘landlordism’ is known as passive income.
But a passive income isn’t enough for landlords. Hamptons itself admitted that the increase in new limited companies is due to landlords realising that there’s more wealth to be hoarded this way.
I have neither the time nor the energy to argue my case, I am simply confident I can. Again, I am sure many of the affluent elder voters of Kooyong and Goldstein conceive of themselves as exceptionally hard-working baby boomers, and it may even be true that they have worked hard, though this fact simply creates confusion for everyone. If you will Crown Prince William of the house of Windsor, for all I know works very very hard as a helicopter pilot for Sea Rescue, or whatever. But most people would never confuse the enormous wealth he stands to inherit one day as a result of the proceeds of whatever income he gets from flying a helicopter.
Many boomers worked really hard and made tremendous personal sacrifices in order to achieve a 6 figure income at the tail end of their working lives. But the majority of their wealth derives from being born in the 1950s and having access to a property market before gens X, Y and Z where the wealthiest of them, were able to buy up and inherit real property in the 70s and 80s, when real wages basically froze and people compensated for the lack of wage growth in an economy that was becoming enormously more productive thanks to technological innovation globally driving mining booms, by speculating on house prices.
Look, I've already written two paragraphs now, but obviously not every boomer did this, most just bought a house to live in and raise their families, like housing was intended, but the wealthiest 20% of boomers, heavily concentrated in Kooyong and Goldstein and other affluent electorates, bought up property portfolios, beach houses, they likely don't let them to people who aren't blood relatives, to whom either for legitimate tax reasons they refuse to sell properties to in favour of below market rents, or for emotional control reasons refuse to sell to their children, and expect their children to buy their own properties by taking on colossal debts under the pretext of the white-collar salaries they have access to through expensive education.
Where I can save time, is by letting Gary Stevenson explain how there is no real difference between rent, interest and profit. Suffice to say, it is a subtle point that most people buying a house can miss. In an Australian context, what most people miss is that the massive premium Australians pay for home ownership, is basically giving the landlord all the rent right now, plus some, to forego their legal right to charge a private income tax to you. Furthermore the bank is also doing this, via interest.
So I think Goldstein reverted to Libs, because of Victoria's progressive land tax policy that has kept Melbourne property markets from tracking as badly as Sydney and Brisbane/Goldcoasts. Not because it's rational, but because it is emotional. This is what I hear old affluent people complaining about out east and bayside.
It also explains why these seats voted by much greater margins than they've flipped "Yes" for the referendum, because the Voice costs them fucking nothing. Despite all the scare mongering about any treaty coming for your houses. Indeed, culture war issues and identity politics are advantageous to the rich because they suck all the oxygen out of class issues and environmental issues.
It also explains why the ALPs super smart move, was to make the election about "Cost of Living" itself a deft euphamism that allows generalized expensiveness to be talked about, without mentioning that everything is because our house prices are literally fucking insane, and suicidal. The Coalition basically could not run a serious campaign, because their policy is literally to accelerate a growing wealth gap.
Now I had intended to make the election a segue into all the other aspects of unseriousness plaguing societies globally, but I'm exhausted now. It shall have to await another time. I got better happier things to write about. (elsewhere not on my blog, which will continue to be quite dour.)