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Thread: Wayne Swan Is A Hypocrite.

  1. Default Wayne Swan Is A Hypocrite.

    Acting Prime Minister Wayne Swan is turning to Bruce Springsteen for inspiration as he steps up his attack on Australia's mining magnates.
    Mr Swan penned an essay in The Monthly magazine earlier this year criticising Gina Rinehart, Clive Palmer and Andrew Forrest for using their wealth to influence public debate for their own vested interest.
    The Treasurer will , during which he will say that his only regret about his earlier comments is that he did not go in hard enough.
    He cites lyrics from the 1970s Springsteen song Badlands: "rich man wanna be king and a king ain't satisfied till he rules everything".
    A long-time Springsteen fan, Mr Swan claims 'The Boss' as a champion of ordinary people and a prophet of social change.
    "It's often the case that great artists - people like Bruce Springsteen - tend to pick up the subterranean rumblings of profound social change long before the economic statisticians notice them. Changes start long before they become statistics," he will say.
    "If you listen to the albums that came out after Born to Run - albums like Darkness on the Edge of Town, The River, Born in the USA and Nebraska - you can hear Springsteen singing about the shifting foundations of the US economy which the economists took much longer to detect, and which of course everyone is talking about now.
    "Springsteen saw that for ordinary people life wasn't getting any better; other people were grabbing all of the gains.
    "As he put it, the sense of daily struggle in each of his songs kept growing. And he responded with an abiding question: when are ordinary people - the people who get up in the morning, work hard and look after their families - going to get a fair go?
    "Nothing has fuelled my own public life more than this question."
    And he warns against allowing Australia to become like the US 'rust belt' states from which Springsteen takes his inspiration.
    "If I could distil the relevance of Bruce Springsteen's music to Australia it would be this: don't let what has happened to the American economy happen here.
    "Don't let Australia become a down-under version of New Jersey, where the people and the communities whose skills are no longer in demand get thrown on the scrap heap of life.
    "Don't let this be a place where ordinary people's views are drowned out and only those with the most expensive megaphones get a say. Don't let it be a place where Gina Rinehart can buy The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian Financial Review with her pocket change and try to trample its fierce and proud independence unchallenged."

    Mr Swan says nominating Springsteen does not dismiss Australian music and also cites Cold Chisel, Midnight Oil and the Hilltop Hoods.
    'Poor taste'
    But Mr Palmer says he prefers Australian folk group Red Gum to The Boss.
    "Unlike the Treasurer, I don't go to the United States for inspiration," he said.
    "I have inspiration in the Australian bush and our culture and our history and he should remember who the Australians represent, not the US Secretary of the Treasury."
    He says Mr Swan is trying to start a class war.
    "It's an indictment on the Treasurer that he has to go to a memorial lecture to deliver something in such poor taste today," he said.

    Opposition Treasury spokesman Joe Hockey has a different take.
    He says the address is aimed at drawing attention to Mr Swan as a potential leadership replacement to Julia Gillard.
    "This is a 'look at me' speech. Now that Julia Gillard's away on holidays and there is significant speculation about the leadership in the Labor Party, this is Wayne Swan saying 'look at me, I'm a contender, I'm there for Labor values'," he said.
    "But the values of division are not the values of traditional Labor Party, and that's his fundamental problem.
    "He's more interested in turning Australians against Australians than in uniting the nation."
    Mr Hockey says Mr Swan's attack on the billionaires is hypocritical.
    "The union bosses who put Julia Gillard into the prime ministership use their power and influence to change the destiny of the Government, and he was party to that," he said.
    "So if you're talking about sectoral interests having a profound and significant influence on the destiny of the nation then Wayne Swan, together with the union bosses and the faceless men, was the architect of that change."

    http://au.news.yahoo.com/vic/latest/...sh-the-bosses/
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Wayne Swan is a clown, and a hypocrite. This intelectual featherweight surely must see that he is making a fool of himself. To come out with hilariously outrageous blather like this particular load, takes a certain kind of mentality, or something.


  2. #2

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    Quote Originally Posted by aussiefree2ride View Post
    Acting Prime Minister Wayne Swan is turning to Bruce Springsteen for inspiration as he steps up his attack on Australia's mining magnates.
    Mr Swan penned an essay in The Monthly magazine earlier this year criticising Gina Rinehart, Clive Palmer and Andrew Forrest for using their wealth to influence public debate for their own vested interest.
    The Treasurer will , during which he will say that his only regret about his earlier comments is that he did not go in hard enough.
    He cites lyrics from the 1970s Springsteen song Badlands: "rich man wanna be king and a king ain't satisfied till he rules everything".
    A long-time Springsteen fan, Mr Swan claims 'The Boss' as a champion of ordinary people and a prophet of social change.
    "It's often the case that great artists - people like Bruce Springsteen - tend to pick up the subterranean rumblings of profound social change long before the economic statisticians notice them. Changes start long before they become statistics," he will say.
    "If you listen to the albums that came out after Born to Run - albums like Darkness on the Edge of Town, The River, Born in the USA and Nebraska - you can hear Springsteen singing about the shifting foundations of the US economy which the economists took much longer to detect, and which of course everyone is talking about now.
    "Springsteen saw that for ordinary people life wasn't getting any better; other people were grabbing all of the gains.
    "As he put it, the sense of daily struggle in each of his songs kept growing. And he responded with an abiding question: when are ordinary people - the people who get up in the morning, work hard and look after their families - going to get a fair go?
    "Nothing has fuelled my own public life more than this question."
    And he warns against allowing Australia to become like the US 'rust belt' states from which Springsteen takes his inspiration.
    "If I could distil the relevance of Bruce Springsteen's music to Australia it would be this: don't let what has happened to the American economy happen here.
    "Don't let Australia become a down-under version of New Jersey, where the people and the communities whose skills are no longer in demand get thrown on the scrap heap of life.
    "Don't let this be a place where ordinary people's views are drowned out and only those with the most expensive megaphones get a say. Don't let it be a place where Gina Rinehart can buy The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian Financial Review with her pocket change and try to trample its fierce and proud independence unchallenged."

    Mr Swan says nominating Springsteen does not dismiss Australian music and also cites Cold Chisel, Midnight Oil and the Hilltop Hoods.
    'Poor taste'
    But Mr Palmer says he prefers Australian folk group Red Gum to The Boss.
    "Unlike the Treasurer, I don't go to the United States for inspiration," he said.
    "I have inspiration in the Australian bush and our culture and our history and he should remember who the Australians represent, not the US Secretary of the Treasury."
    He says Mr Swan is trying to start a class war.
    "It's an indictment on the Treasurer that he has to go to a memorial lecture to deliver something in such poor taste today," he said.

    Opposition Treasury spokesman Joe Hockey has a different take.
    He says the address is aimed at drawing attention to Mr Swan as a potential leadership replacement to Julia Gillard.
    "This is a 'look at me' speech. Now that Julia Gillard's away on holidays and there is significant speculation about the leadership in the Labor Party, this is Wayne Swan saying 'look at me, I'm a contender, I'm there for Labor values'," he said.
    "But the values of division are not the values of traditional Labor Party, and that's his fundamental problem.
    "He's more interested in turning Australians against Australians than in uniting the nation."
    Mr Hockey says Mr Swan's attack on the billionaires is hypocritical.
    "The union bosses who put Julia Gillard into the prime ministership use their power and influence to change the destiny of the Government, and he was party to that," he said.
    "So if you're talking about sectoral interests having a profound and significant influence on the destiny of the nation then Wayne Swan, together with the union bosses and the faceless men, was the architect of that change."

    http://au.news.yahoo.com/vic/latest/...sh-the-bosses/
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Wayne Swan is a clown, and a hypocrite. This intelectual featherweight surely must see that he is making a fool of himself. To come out with hilariously outrageous blather like this particular load, takes a certain kind of mentality, or something.
    Hang on - al the guff about music aside are you seriously trying to tell me that you are OK with mulit-billionare magnates influencing public policy??
    The internet is like a herd of performing elephants with diarrhoea -- massive, difficult to redirect, awe-inspiring, entertaining, and a source of mind- boggling amounts of excrement when you least expect it.
    Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not adding it to a fruit salad

  3. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Bowerbird View Post
    Hang on - al the guff about music aside are you seriously trying to tell me that you are OK with mulit-billionare magnates influencing public policy??
    More to the point, are you OK with the bullying, big brother tactics of this "Govt"?

  4. #4

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    Quote Originally Posted by aussiefree2ride View Post
    More to the point, are you OK with the bullying, big brother tactics of this "Govt"?
    I see far more bullying from the likes of Palmer......
    The internet is like a herd of performing elephants with diarrhoea -- massive, difficult to redirect, awe-inspiring, entertaining, and a source of mind- boggling amounts of excrement when you least expect it.
    Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not adding it to a fruit salad

  5. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Bowerbird View Post
    Hang on - al the guff about music aside are you seriously trying to tell me that you are OK with mulit-billionare magnates influencing public policy??
    Now there's a contradiction if i've ever read one.

    Not ok for "mulit-billionare magnates influencing public policy"

    Yet its ok for bankers and their corporations to influence the global warming religion.
    Last edited by dumbanddumber; Aug 01 2012 at 01:55 AM.
    There has never been a more serious assault on our standard of living than the carbon tax. dumbanddumber

    "The cost, paid by big polluters, will be passed through to the prices of the goods you buy." Julia Gillard

    "Australian households will ultimately bear the full cost of the carbon price." Ross Garnaut

    "A carbon tax does not guarantee emissions reductions" Former Labor Climate Change Minister Penny Wong

  6. #6

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    Wayne Swan is an imbecile.
    Can you imagine the politicians of yesteryear referring to people like Bob Dylan, Jimmy Barnes, Jimmy Hendrix and so forth...
    Politicians like Gough Whitlam, Malcolm Fraser, Bob Hawke, Paul Keating, John Howard.....
    The other point I find odd is that Swan (being the best Treasurer in the world, presiding over the economy that every other
    country in the world is envious of) makes reference to...quote "Don't let Australia become a down-under version of New Jersey, where the people and the communities whose skills are no longer in demand get thrown on the scrap heap of life"

    This a weird quote for a politician who is the Treasurer of "the lucky country"....are we to become a "rust belt" Mr Swan.....
    As another idiot once said "Please explain"?......

  7. #7

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    I think Palmer raised a brilliant point regarding the idiot Swan, when he said he didn't need to get inspirational about Australia from an American singer singing about American issues. Seems there's nothing in Australia or any Australian that inspires Mr. swan. maybe he has his head too far up American arse to even notice whats happening right here in Australia. Swan is a typical scum-bag politician!!
    Last edited by culldav; Aug 01 2012 at 05:43 AM.

  8. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Bowerbird View Post
    I see far more bullying from the likes of Palmer......
    What do you call this? Here we have a "government" using it`s power against it`s own people for it`s own political purposes, if this isn`t the lowest example of self serving political bullying in Australia`s history, I`d like to see what is.
    Furthermore, it`s been noted by the Australian public, that the Union/ALP power block, have zero regard for democratic process, or electoral integrity in any form, crapping on about Bruce Springstein won`t fool anyone.

    For Wayne Swan to sook about private citizens like blimp boy Palmer, not having to bow down to his dream of absolute power is pathetically hypocrytical. This just exemplifies the weakness of the typical bully.

    ============================== ============================== ============================== =

    http://au.news.yahoo.com/latest/a/-/...n-tax-posters/
    Labor is warning small businesses against displaying the Coalition's anti-carbon tax posters, saying they risk million-dollar fines if the information is found to be misleading.

    The Coalition has sent the fliers to bakeries, butchers, dry cleaners and fruit shops just days before the carbon tax is due to take effect.

    Labor is warning businesses to be "very, very careful" about being part of Opposition Leader Tony Abbott's campaign by displaying the posters in their shop fronts.

    "Don't allow him to drag you into his cynical scare campaign because the consequences of that are very serious," Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury told Parliament.

    "If you do mislead your customers, then you could face fines of up to $1.1 million."

    But the Coalition has rejected suggestions their small business posters are misleading.

    "The fliers do nothing more than explain the Government own modelling and policy," Opposition small business spokesman Bruce Billson said.

    "This is just another example of the Gillard Government trying to intimidate small business to not pass on or talk about the impact of the carbon tax."

    The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has set up a hotline for members of the public to make complaints about misleading carbon tax claims.

    The tactic is a further sign that both sides of politics are preparing to ramp up their campaigning efforts surrounding the tax.

    On Tuesday Mr Abbott told a meeting of Coalition MPs that he and other senior party figures would be campaigning "across the country", warning people the tax would push up the cost of living and threaten jobs.

    Labor is also preparing a coordinated campaign this weekend to reassure the community about the effects of the tax.

    Special Minister of State Gary Gray plans to visit the South Australian city of Whyalla on Sunday - a community Mr Abbott said would be "wiped off the map" because of the carbon pricing scheme.

    Mr Abbott visited an RSPCA compound in Canberra on Tuesday to point out that "thousands" of charities would be worse off under the tax despite Government reassurances.

    The head of the RSPCA in the ACT, Michael Linke, estimates the cost of the carbon tax will be somewhere between $5,000 and $10,000 per year for the local organisation.

    "At this stage we're not expecting job losses here in Canberra," Mr Linke told reporters at Mr Abbott's media conference.

    "There is absolutely no way that I'm going to compromise animal welfare, so we are going to have to shave costs in other areas."

    The Government says more than $300 million is available to councils, community groups and charities to help offset the costs of the carbon tax.

    Prime Minister Julia Gillard used Question Time to ridicule Mr Abbott's visit to the animal welfare charity.

    "I can assure the Leader of the Opposition (that) on July 1, cats will still purr, dogs will still bark and the Australian economy will continue to get stronger," Ms Gillard told Parliament.

    "Presumably tomorrow he will be out trying to scare Skippy the bush kangaroo, and the day after he'll be out trying to scare Puff the Magic Dragon, and so it will go on."
    Last edited by aussiefree2ride; Aug 01 2012 at 03:08 PM.

  9. #9

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    "I can assure the Leader of the Opposition (that) on July 1, cats will still purr, dogs will still bark and the Australian economy will continue to get stronger," Ms Gillard told Parliament.

    "Presumably tomorrow he will be out trying to scare Skippy the bush kangaroo, and the day after he'll be out trying to scare Puff the Magic Dragon, and so it will go on."

    Gillard is a very poor politician, a very poor intimidator of Paul Keatings attempted humour, and a very poor leader of this country.....

  10. #10

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    The worst PM and the worst political party this country has ever been Governed by. Its staggering to think about the immature childish mistakes these clowns have made, and the waste of tens of billions of tax payers dollars funding “bogus” projects managed by incompetents.

    One day soon, Australians will realise these current batch of politicians are sanctimonious self-serving grubs, and hopefully the people will try to find a better way to be represented and Governed.

    Until the people (sheep) wake up, then nothing much can be done.

    How can the people keep blaming politicians, when the people keep voting the same idiots into Govern them.

    The “buck” has to stop with the people.

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