Gee, Chris Kenny is a political commentator well worth ignoring, isn't he? Here is the start of his excuse making ramble in The Australian today on the state of politics:
Wandering
around the US last month I was reminded about the less than compelling
place that partisan politics has in our daily lives.
Even
in the Democrat heartlands of California and Hawaii, whether in the big
cities or the back blocks, Americans didn’t mention politics or their
new President unless I raised the topic. They were — to use a phrase —
relaxed and comfortable; just getting on with their lives. [My note: it's hardly common in any country, is it, to ask a tourist to discuss what they think about your country's politics?]
This,
of course, should be no surprise and it merely confirmed my instincts
as I mulled over what we are told are tectonic shifts in the political
mood in Western liberal democracies.
Brexit,
Donald Trump, Marine Le Pen and even Pauline Hanson are often
characterised as evidence of a far-right, populist upsurge. This
analysis often veers into patronising or demeaning references to the
voting public. [Yes Chris - protestor bashing, redneck rallies for Trump spouting know lies were just typical examples of all political rallies from the last 50 years, hey?]
If this were true, what could be the trigger? Why would this be happening? And where will it take Australian politics? [Gee, what might Chris think is the reason - oh yeah, the Lefty political/media class has gone completely nuts and out of touch. Like the significant majority of American voters for actually voted for Hillary, I suppose, you moron.]
Perhaps
much of the political/media class has misjudged what is going on. Maybe
this is less a case of the public mood shifting than voter realisation
that the political/media class has shifted from a once centrist axis.
And so on and so on. A predictable worthless commentator if ever there was one.
1 comment:
Chris Kenny went to Nauru and found paradise!
Post a Comment