Archive for August, 2010

I am not a tech-head

About 14 years ago, my then employer replaced the dodgy old green screen terminals in the office with desktop pc’s running Windows, gave us all internet access and from there on in, the way I went about my work changed completely.

I am not a tech-head.

But it became immediately apparent to me back then that if I wished to remain relevant to the workforce for the remainder of my working life, what I would need to do was get across all this new-fangled technology and have a clue.

Which I did, and which I have.

But it does not appear to be apparent to the current leader of the federal opposition and many of his acolytes that if this country wishes to remain relevant to the ways of the world and how it will go about its business in the future, what it needs to do is stop thinking the future will be secured for an eternity if only we continue to invest all our high hopes in a small clutch of billionaire mining giants whose sole fucking talent is pulling rocks out of the fucking ground and selling them to fucking China who then make stuff and then fucking well sell it back to us.

We need to make some fucking stuff of our own.

For it appears to me that investing in technology for the future, things like research and development in the sciences and such, just might be a nifty way to go about proving that this country and its inhabitants are not an intellectually lazy but “lucky” bunch of instant shake ‘n’ bake fucktards whose greatest heroes are an old cunt who hit balls around a fucking paddock with a wooden paddle for a living and some dickhead who liked throwing himself on top of fucking reptiles and maybe, just maybe, we can aspire to be a little less average and ordinary than we really are.

It’s a big ask I know, as plans such as these involve things like … foresight, imagination, innovation, intelligence, the courage of …

Nah, fuck it.

I have two tin cans and some string.

And a bicycle.

She’ll be right.

As you were.

Tags: ,

Delays

More problems for Tony Abbott:

White models of Apple’s new iPhone 4 have continued to be more challenging to manufacture than we originally expected, and as a result they will not be available until later this year. The availability of the more popular iPhone 4 black models is not affected.

Could this be the end of the Boatphone?

Tags: , , ,

Tony’s Logic

Inside Tony Abbott’s mind:

Problem

Problem

Solved

Solved

It really is so simple. I can’t believe that no one thought of it before.

Tags: , ,

Boatman and Robin

'Robin, what's that ringing noise?'<br />‘Holy smoke, Boatman, I think it’s the boatphone!’” title=”

'Robin, what's that ringing noise?'
'Holy smoke, Boatman, I think it's the boatphone!'

Tags: , , , ,

Friday’s Lovechild #15

On Wednesday, Football Federation Australia appointed Holger Osieck as head coach of the Socceroos. I, like most Aussie sports fans, don’t know much about this mysterious German — but one thing I do know is I’m not entirely comfortable with our national football team being managed by a bloke who looks like the spawn of intergenerational Ramsay Street Robinsons:

Stefan Dennis + Alan Dale = Holger Osieck

And from one Ramsay to another, here — at the behest of Jonowee — is my crack at heroic chef turned barbarian Gordon’s good mate Tracy Grimshaw:

Noni Hazlehurst + Liz Hayes = Tracy Grimshaw

I could bullshit and say Scott Bridges’ Steve Fielding challenge came in too late for me to bother this week, but the truth is it’s got me stumped for the moment. I’m determined to get him right, so stay tuned.

Tags: , , , , , ,

Election 2010: driving me to apathy

I want so desperately not to care. I wish I could look at politics and feel “this doesn’t affect me” like so many other normal people.

I care who wins the election. I care about health policy. I care about education policy. I care about environmental policy and transport policy. I care that millions of Australians – mostly Indigenous – live in poverty. I care that there are children who can’t read. I care that commited couples who want to get married can’t.

But what angers me the most is that each passing day of this election campaign I seem to care less and less.

With each day that goes by I feel more anger, that passes into dispair that passes into apathy. My disillusionment with politics is almost complete, my apathy almost final. Election campaign 2010 was the culprit; the final nail in the coffin of my passion for politics.

I guess it was naive of me, and I should have listened to the people who were much older than me when they tried to warn me. But I genuinely believed that government could be a force for the betterment of society. I believed that passionate people could show leadership and inspire a country to make itself better. Use the tools of government to make life for all people in Australia fairer and more equitable. My optimism shown to be completely foolish by the 2010 election campaign.

It was pretty tragic to see a sitting Prime Minister outed by his own party before the end of his first term. Rudd had lost his ability to sell, and there was no doubt that was causing problems. But I suspect Rudd was being frustrated from within: bad advice and wavering internal support for his policy positions would have made his job very difficult. The whole affair was made all the more tragic when he went public earlier this week to defend his achievements. Kevin Rudd made the most concise and convincing attack on Tony Abbott that has been made for the entire campaign. His appearance on Late Night Live filled me with something akin to joy. Finally someone from the ALP was articulating what needed to be said.

But it was short lived. The media turned his appearance into a soap opera. A will they/won’t they saga between Gillard and Rudd designed to play out in prime time news bulletins.

And all once again seemed hopelessly lost.

The media. To the pack of journalists (sic) who get paid to follow the candidates around, it’s not about you. It was never about you. The tax payers fund your junket. Politicians might occasionally not answer your questions. Sometimes they might run a little late, change their plans at the last minute and sometimes you might not get a policy document in advance. This may inconvenience you a little bit, you may have to work a little bit harder before filing. You may even get tired from standing up all day. Deal with it. Politicians aren’t there to make your job easy. They are trying to get reelected and sometimes journalistic scrutiny isn’t what they want.

So when you do get to ask them questions, you should scrutinize their policy. The tax-payer doesn’t fund your Australia wide travel so you can ask questions about why Tim isn’t campaigning with Julia, your there to ask questions of their policy, after all one of these people will be the leader of the country.

When Tony Abbott says. “Stop the taxes” you ask “What taxes? How will you recover the money?” when he says “Stop the waste,” you ask “To what waste are your referring, Tony? How much money is being ‘wasted’ and how do you propose we stop it?” and when he says “Stop the boats” you ask him “How do we stop the boats and why should we stop them?”

When they announce a policy you don’t ask them why their boyfriend isn’t there, you ask them about the policy.

Don’t complain about how this campaign has been dominated by distractions then report only on the distractions. You shouldn’t be making it harder for politicians to talk about issues. You should make it harder for them to be distracted from the issues.

Mark Latham is not an issue. Tim Mathieson is not an issue. Cabinet discussions are not an issue. The calluses on your feet are not an issue. Your boredom with the campaign is not an issue. Julia Gillard’s earlobes are not an issue and nor is what the Internet thinks of them.

Journalists of the press pack, editors, news directors and media moguls: political discourse in this country is broken and it’s all your fault.

So yes, Gillard is pretty uninspiring. Yes, Tony Abbott just scares me. The ALP and the Liberal Party look more and more alike. But that’s not it.

I think I lost faith in politics because of the media. Because ultimately, if anyone was in a position to raise political discoure in this country, it is the media. The media asks the questions. The media reports the news. All political discourse is mediated, the media can raise the level of this discourse.

I want to make this country better. I want those who are disadvantaged to be helped. I want those who do not have rights given rights. I want preserve the planet on which I live. But it’s all starting to feel a little hopeless. The whole system just isn’t working.

I’m not really angry, I’m not even surprised anymore. I’m just disappointed. I thought it could be different.

Tags: , , , , , ,

Friday’s Lovechild #14

Bit later than usual this week … but it’s still Friday, so anyone inclined to complain is more than welcome to pull up a seat and browse Bistro GroupThink’s seasonal menu, upon which the soup du jour is a steaming great bowl of shut le fuck up.

Now, on to this week’s Lovechild. I couldn’t go past this nice young man, who still has more of Kevin Rudd’s blood on his hands than the surgeon who ripped out the poor bastard’s gall bladder this week — AWU national sechetary Paul Howes.

Nick Frost + David Sowerbutts = Paul Howes

I’d love another challenge this week, GroupThinkers. And I promise not to be too sick or busy to have a crack at it.

Tags: , ,

Election Caption Contest #3

Photo: Alan Porritt/AAP

Photo: Alan Porritt/AAP

You know what to do.

Tags: , ,

They didn’t mention that in the ads

Rio Tinto profit announcement today:

Mining giant Rio Tinto Ltd has unveiled a first half profit strongly up on the equivalent period last year, reflecting higher commodity prices.

Rio said its net earnings were $US1.62 billion, up 260 per cent on the prior corresponding period, and underlying earnings were $US5.78 billion, up 125 per cent.

Consensus figures from analysts were that the company’s underlying profit would be in the range of $US4.7 billion to $US7.0 billion.

Rio chairman Jan du Plessis said “We are firmly focused on high quality growth with many tier one options ahead. We look to the future with confidence”.

A growth in profits of 260 per cent and you were talking about leaving? Investors would have been a little pissed at you if you did that, wouldn’t they, Jan du Plessis?

Those threats about withdrawing investment seem somewhat hollow, don’t they?

Tags: , ,

I’m done.

Stop the world, I would like to get off now.

Justin Bieber is set to play himself in a 3D biopic.

Canadian-born Bieber, 16, shot to stardom after recordings of him singing and dancing were spotted by music manager Scooter Braun on YouTube.

He was signed by Island Records and has since topped charts worldwide with his album My World 2.0.

Now the story of Bieber’s phenomenal rise to fame is coming to the big screen in 2011.

Oscar-winning filmmaker Davis Guggenheim, best known for the documentary An Inconvenient Truth, has been lined up to direct.

On Twitter, Bieber wrote: “This is so sick!! Gonna come out in theatre’s Worldwide Valentine’s 2011!!! I’m taking this thing worldwide thanks to u all!! Hyped!!”

3D bio-pic? 3D!? Why 3D? Let along the other major question this raises, why a bi0-pic?

What’s next, an Autobiography?

Oh…

*bashes head repeatedly against desk*

Tags: , , ,