There has been press coverage lately of a poll conducted by Australian National University regarding attitudes to this summer’s bushfires.
Given the politicization of the fires, there were no surprises.
The poll claimed to have found only “27.3 percent of respondents reported that they were confident or very confident in the Government,” a low level indeed for a government just recently re-elected.
The Guardian, right on cue, referred to the “horror summer in which Morrison chose to holiday in Hawaii.”
Does anyone seriously think that, given the irrational and often downright dishonest coverage of the fire season, the poll result would have been any different if he had remained in Australia?
When I read The Guardian’s predictable coverage, I was reminded of Mark Twain’s words: “To not read the news is to be uninformed, but to read it is to be misinformed.”
Can anyone doubt that the Australian media’s overwhelmingly partisan outlets played a significant role in shaping opinions about this government’s response to the fires?
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not suggesting Scott Morrison is immune to blunders or poor performance.
Certainly, there was valid criticism, some made in good faith, about how he communicated with the public in the fires’ early days (this is an area for political self-improvement and sharper advisers, not a major character flaw), but what we have been seeing on social media is a far different beast from what was once normal criticism.
It is yet another example of fake outrage placed at the service of political ends.
We’ve seen “Scotty from Marketing” — a brilliant put-down, by the way — accused of not doing enough, not caring enough, of needing to be shamed into acting, even of forcing people to shake his hand.
To reach these conclusions requires Olympic-standard mental gymnastics.
These partisans, and the media which gave them a megaphone, are not rational, and in the case of the latter, not ethical either. They are capable of twisting anything that suits their agenda and always eager to do so.
As Owen Whalan, an 85-year-old bushfire evacuee from Taree, put it when the PM gave him a hug, “Whether you do something or you do nothing, you’ll always be criticized.”
The fires provided an excuse to rant.
For many, Morrison became the villain after refusing to meet media expectations and predictions by losing the last election, the one the Guardian, ABC, and Nine papers tirelessly assured us would be all about climate change and the electorate’s fear of a burning planet.
When the bush burned, it wasn’t overgrown state forests and fuel loads in neglected national parks that were blamed but coal exports and the like.
That the media not only went along with this but actively promoted it might help to explain why Australians tell pollsters they place little faith in what they read.
Graham Richardson wrote in The Australian: “Once you are in the top job you are expected to get it right every time,” but it seems to me there was a special vitriol, an acid distilled equally from electoral frustration and a virulent contempt, behind the mob assault on the PM and his performance
So why the readiness of some to hate the PM?
American economist Thomas Sowell provides a valuable insight: “People do not want a factual or analytical explanation that leaves them emotionally unsatisfied. They want villains to hate and heroes to cheer.”
A designated villain enables critics to feel good about themselves, to think ‘Well at least I’m far better than him.’
The PM knows this and has acknowledged: “I know when people get fearful or indeed angry, and they want to express that, and if that means they want to get angry at me, then if that helps, by all means, I’ve got broad shoulders.”
We generally don’t enter a situation free of bias when making observations; rather, we bring preexisting beliefs and desires of which we are often not even aware.
As Australian social scientist Hugh Mackay notes, “the observations we make in life tend to confirm the perspective from which they were made.”
For some, a little part of the brain is always on the lookout for a villain, and those so fixated generally find what they seek.
If it’s villains the public wants, then the media are shamefully quick to oblige. With selective reporting and spin, they customize villains and present them for a public burning.
Strip away the references to Hawaii getaways and whipped-up anti-coal hysteria and the fact remains that Morrison has allocated unprecedented funds and resources to managing the fires and helping those affected by them.
He’s also addressed the need to overhaul current conventions so that the Commonwealth can more readily respond to natural disasters.
But why dwell on that when a family holiday is there to be presented as one of the greatest outrages against human decency in living memory?
For those who derive some satisfaction from knocking the PM and this nation’s government, ask yourselves how well your hate campaigns worked at the last election?
There is still much hard work to do after the fires. They will have long-term implications in ways we can’t even imagine. While some problems can be anticipated, some will be totally unexpected.
And let’s not forget that during the clean-up, there are going to be the usual major issues that require government management, such a maintaining a strong economy and maintaining international relations, as always.
The knee-jerk naysaying we can expect, the mania that saw bushfires blamed on coal mining, isn’t going to help what is a massive national recovery operation.
Here the media can help. We do not need any more journalists betraying their craft, which is supposed to be about getting to the truth, by taking their cues and themes from Twitter’s keyboard warriors.
The damage the bushfires wrought is extensive and the recovery from them will be long, expensive and arduous.
If the critics want to truly feel good about themselves, then lending a helping hand and an encouraging voice is a better way to go.
I’d like to think that’s what a true Australian does. I’m also far from optimistic that is what we’ll see.
Read more at Quadrant Online
Sorry I hit the send button a little too soon.
What I meant to say was as follows:
Following along on the comment of Dave from Reedy Creek:
Every person I know in Western Canada is totally fed up with the climate change mantra. The media pump it to the extreme. We have the Federal government in Ottawa now DEMANDING zero emissions by 2050. Where will CANADA get money from to do anything if oil export is stopped, every vehicle is electric so no excise from fuel to fund anything, 95% of farming will cease as huge farm machinery running on electricity would not happen. Great future, no exports, no money for essential services, no food; sounds like a fun lifestyle. Oh and what about air travel without current fuel? That is just a foretaste, every hospital is now totally computer run. I can go on and on. Why am I saying this? The blindness of the media with their promotion of mythical climate change is designed to support the short-sighted ignorant left and their good puppet Greta. PERIOD.
Thanks Dave for the lines – I couldn’t’ have said it better myself.
Sameperobkem in canada.
Sorry I hit the send button a little too soon.
What I meant to say was as follows:
Following along on the comment of Dave from Reedy Creek:
Every person I know in Western Canada is totally fed up with the climate change mantra. The media pump it to the extreme. We have the Federal government in Ottawa now DEMANDING zero emissions by 2050. Where will CANADA get money from to do anything if oil export is stopped, every vehicle is electric so no excise from fuel to fund anything, 95% of farming will cease as huge farm machinery running on electricity would not happen. Great future, no exports, no money for essential services, no food; sounds like a fun lifestyle. Oh and what about air travel without current fuel? That is just a foretaste, every hospital is now totally computer run. I can go on and on. Why am I saying this? The blindness of the media with their promotion of mythical climate change is designed to support the short-sighted ignorant left and their good puppet Greta. PERIOD.
Thanks Dave for the lines – I couldn’t’ have said it better myself.
We could go back to farming with horses, but we couldn’t keep up, and people eat horses, don’t they?
We all know how the Liberals M.S. Media and the Greens like to blame this on Global Warming/Climate Change as well a s Trump and the Voters these their mostly there to sell their lie a day rags like The NYT’s the Guardian Time,Rolling Stone and the rest of the lie a day M.S. Media and Twain was right about the news its still the same old same old the NYT’s and CNN LIES LIES LIES SQUAWK SQUAWK KKRRAAAWWWW SKRRRREEE SKREET
Every person I know is totally fed up with the climate change mantra. The media pump it to the extreme. We have the opposition now wanting zero emissions by 2050. Where will Australia get money from to do anything if coal export is stopped, every vehicle is electric so no excise from fuel to fund anything, 95% of farming will cease as huge farm machinery running on electricity would not happen. Great future, no exports, no money for essential services, no food; sounds like a fun lifestyle. Oh and what about air travel without current fuel? That is just a foretaste, every hospital is now totally computer run. I can go on and on. Why am I saying this? The blindness of the media with their promotion of mythical climate change as a source of our awful fires is designed to support the left. I am yet to see or hear any destructive and dangerous Green Party person take even a shred of responsibility for their leading role in the fires. They have forced successive governments, both State and Federal to stop sensible forest management. The majority of fires start on government land that is totally neglected. We have more and more National Parks so greater and greater areas become fire hazards as we have just seen. Even our capital Canberra has been severely threatened twice in a fairly short time, fires coming out of parks and forests. Very little blame sheeted to arsonists or one of our normal regular droughts caused by oceanic anomalies totally beyond any government control but it is somehow Scott Morrison’s fault. As one of my grandsons says “Really???”
Well one ha to get active politically and get the socialist/marxist clowns out of office.