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Solidarity has its limits

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There are never enough hours in the day. I could adopt some time management techniques, pick up a minute here, another there but in the end, it is a fool’s errand. There is not now and never will be enough time for me to read a Van Badham column in The Guardian.

As a useful expedient I could turn to Twitter to bask in her wit and wisdom as it tumbles from mind to manicured nail, albeit expressed in expurgated 280 keystroke form but alas, Badham dispatched me to Coventry some years ago.

Long story short, I callously mocked Badham for headlining some ghastly Guardian event where she promised to unlock the secrets of column writing to a paying audience. Presumably those in attendance would be enlightened to within an inch of their lives and leave toting the dreaded Participation Award.

I ventured on Twitter that ponying up to attend may not be an especially prudent use of the punters’ hard-earned, caveat emptor and all that, and was sent to Twitter detention for my trouble.

Why does any of this matter? Well, on Tuesday evening in Brisbane, Labor leader Bill Shorten strode purposefully to the stage at the ACTU Congress dinner and delivered a speech Badham regarded as akin to the Sermon on the Mount.

Only after the event did we learn that Shorten’s speech was one of the ‘My first hundred days in office’ type. A little presumptuous, you might think. Sure, Labor has led in 36 successive Newspolls but those same polls show Shorten about as popular as something I just stepped in. Still, Shorten is the alternative PM and as such any undertaking he makes in a speech of this kind is absolutely in the public interest.

But the public was kept in the dark. If Shorten did have a dream we were not to know about it because the media was forbidden to enter. Journalists, including Ewin Hannan from this august journal, were denied entry at the door. No shorthand, no scribbles, no service.

This left Ms Badham as the sole journalist — and I apply the term with the broadest of brushes — to live-tweet the oratorial magnificence.

That she is a Labor shill is not especially important. After all bias, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. All columnists engage in polemic and sophistry. We are not paid to be right, we are paid to be certain and Ms Badham was certain that Bill Shorten’s speech was one for the ages.

Her social media gushes were all the contemporaneous reporting the public had to go on, presuming she has not already blocked them on Twitter for the crime of poking a bit of fun at her expense.

But Van Badham is not just a Labor abettor. She is a Vice President of the MEAA’s Victorian branch. The MEAA is the union responsible for journalists and other assorted weirdos who dwell somewhere on the media spectrum.

Certainly, it was not Badham’s call to ban journalists from what should have been a public function. It was said the secretary for the ACTU, Sally McManus, wanted delegates to ‘relax.’ However, the media ban extended to some of the sessions at the Congress. Presumably delegates needed a little more time to put their feet up.

Working journalists were not just prohibited from working, the entire industry, including thousands of journos represented by the MEAA specifically and the ACTU generally were virtually told to get stuffed. Freelance journos who were stopped at the door, were left to contemplate their losses in time and travel expenditure.

For what it’s worth, the MEAA has registered a complaint with the ACTU. It will almost certainly come to nothing. I suspect even Shorten would be annoyed by the censoriousness, having made a significant speech that exists now only on the flat surface of a screen on his own website.

Of the media ban, Van Badham, who is supposed to be representing journalists, said and did precisely nothing. She merrily tweeted through the evening and into the following day on sundry topics and unrelated matters. She must have known the people she was charged to represent had been royally shafted.

Solidarity, like hours in the day, has its limits.

96 Comments

  • Razor says:

    As I said in the previous blog this is all about stopping the media seeing the bruvvers calling each other comrade and singing the Internationale. It would provide more evidence regarding Shortens ties to the more radical sections of the trade union movement. What amuses me is a member of the Victorian right beholden to the CFMEU and one of the most leftist and dangerous ACTU leaders we have seen in decades.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    So, …. according to Van, the guts of Bills QLD closed-door gee-up to the union folk was synonymous with that well known 2,000-year-old soppy mountainside morality chat about humility, peacemaking, purity and righteousness. A condemnation of hypocrisy and an unconditional renunciation of violence.

    Yeah, …. and I’ll bet the CFMMEU members present pissed themselves.

  • jack says:

    TV, does the last post indicate that you have achieved a great age and congratulations are due?

  • Penny says:

    JTI…..as per usual I admit to being out if the country too long as I have never heard of Van Badham before, although I do subscribe to the Guardian. I also subscribe to The Australian but find I rarely get time to read most of the contributors columns there either ( with the exception of your good self and James Jeffrey of course) I find Twitter an excellent source of catching up with news quickly. Having said that I have to say I am quite concerned with what is happening to the media in this country. The ABC is being treated appallingly by this present government purely because of political expediency. In Sydney last week I had the misfortune to catch The Today Show ( or one of those shows) at my daughters house…..they were discussing the fact that Prince Harry didn’t want Meghan to wear trousers and that Prince William hadn’t told George that he was going to be King….ffs. I do realize that most people get their news online, but really if the Australian public is being offered this garbage as news I really do despair.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      I suspect only a small percentage of the audience would take that sort of nonsense seriously. The Sunrise program on 7 is a shocker. It gave Hanson a voice when she had none (alright, she made her comeback on Dancing with the Stars – another 7 program) and that’s enough for me to give it a wide berth. Having Latham and Kennett on makes it an even easier decision to make.

      • Dwight says:

        I stopped watching Sunrise years ago when I challenged Koch’s uncritical assessment of Dick Smith’s economic nativism. Smith didn’t like it and responded.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Dick is a complete fool about population. If we listened to him we’d have to kill 15 million Australians right now.

          • Nick says:

            Jack, agree entirely. If we don’t grow our population by the various mechanisms available, someone else will populate this country anyway. Surely better we (as in a largely pluralistic Western democracy) remain in charge. Don’t think the someone else is going to be at all concerned about the environment or sustainability acknowledging that some think the current government and alternative are not too concerned either.
            Cheers, Nick

      • Trivalve says:

        Don’t start me…

        • Lou oTOD says:

          You may not recall Smoke, last year Razor and I were speculating how long Fairfax would last, and now we have it. If ever a media organisation was the handmaiden of its own demise, Fairfax or Faufax as it has become known thakes the gold medal.

        • Dismayed says:

          the coalition media law changes were blindly supported by most of the usual cons on this blog. Now lo and behold they have a concern? At the time a few noted it would lead to further concentration of the already most concentrated media market on the planet. No Surprises.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            I see the Huangchook Corporation of Shanghai is cashed up and looking for major media acquisitions in Australia.
            Should be alright eh?

          • BASSMAN says:

            Fairfax will now be called NINE. Strange, Costello is head of ts Board
            NINE usually run a right wing philosophy so that make sense.
            They say the editorial independence of the AGE/SMH will not be interfered with.
            What a lie with a Liberal at its head. Murdoch will eventually buy NINE so he gets the papers. That failing, Costello will just replace all of the
            editors with right wing Liberal stooges.What do you have? The Terror. The Herald Sun and The Oz duplicated.

      • Tracy says:

        And now a merger between Nine and Fairfax, few jobs will go there no doubt.
        Tend to tune in to SKY for the news around 6 am but unless there’s something happening nothing else and certainly nothing after dark on that channel

        • Lou oTOD says:

          For sarters Tracy, there is no such thing as a merger, as I experienced several times in my working career. There is always a f—or and a f—ee.

          Fairfax will sit comfrtably in the latter, and the squealing already commenced from their editorial staff is a case in point.it is ironic this deal comes hot on the heels of Fairfax gifting its production capability to News Corporation. Gutted like a fish out of water.

      • Milton says:

        They put morning TV on at the wrong time and even if they changed the time the shows aren’t worth watching. Kochie, what a goose but all credit to him as he didn’t get the gig on his looks.

    • BASSMAN says:

      The amazing thing about the gutting of the ABC by the Looters is this….if you take in TV and radio, the ABC runs several hundred programs. The cutting of over $300 million since 2013 is because the Liberals disagree with or do not like, about 4 programs out of these hundreds. Without a doubt, the ABC will be an election issue which will cost the Looters thousands of votes. And then, if they lose the election, they will really feel the full force of the ABC. The ABC is the most trusted, unbiased source of news in survey after survey. For the Looters to continually ignore this and sink in the knife after what they have said* is suicide. Maybe after the election, the ABC WILL resort to a slice of bias-may as well. That is the accusation. This would be nothing more than fair payback for a huge lie. One of many lies. Politicians who lie and break promises, Labor or Liberal, should be fined heavily and kicked out of parliament. The definition of a ‘lie’ should defined by the Supreme Court and the necessary action sanctioned by that court. Of course this will never happen.

      * ,“I want to give people this absolute assurance. No cuts to health, no changes to pensions, no cuts to the ABC or SBS”

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Get off the grass Bassy, you could drive a B-double between a “lie” and simply “changing one’s mind”. The SC wouldn’t touch it with a barge pole. And besides, there’s plenty of scope in the system for rulings on perjury, swearing false oaths, giving false evidence, etc. Broken promises are not even on the judicial radar. However, given the march of the PC brigade through our institutions, it causes one to ponder whether the “black” letter law would, or should, allow a little “white” lie to pass muster. Or perhaps should we be seriously considering black banning both descriptors?
        Any thoughts?

    • Mack the Knife says:

      When they started making updates of the reality shows news items they lost me.

    • Bella says:

      Penny, I’d rather chew my own arm off than watch a minute of the insanity that is breakfast television. I mean honestly, what thinking person can relate to the verbal dross or the cringe-worthy reality show snippets they loosely label as news. I guess there’d be a bit of real news so they’d have to put on a fake sad face for those few minutes.
      Sadder than all the cuts to our ABC by a scared shitless government, is the recent tendency I’ve noticed for the hosts of their News Breakfast show to now engage in comedy skits with one another that add nothing but embarrassment to them & their audience.
      I too despair Penny & I’m very concerned about the dumbing-down of our society by reality shows. Exactly what message is sent to adolescent girls by a bunch of brain-dead half-naked botox-lipped women competing on national TV for a loser guy who can’t get a date in the real world? I say the wrong one but maybe that’s the idea…….🤐

  • BASSMAN says:

    PREVIOUS BLOG:-The news we get from the USA about Trump is almost invariably via ‘liberal’ commentators – as for the Fox News take, it is simply dismissed out of hand by Australian political editors as unworthy of reporting. But Trump continues to retain about 42% popularity with the broad US electorate. Why? Because he is wildly popular with red-neck, backwoodsmen and also Establishment Republicans … because his legislative programme keeps on delivering for them. Rich Americans love him because of his tax cuts. Small-town conservatives love him for his conservative agenda – the only way this will change is if his tariffs result in them being hit, eg. unemployment. But things seem to be going well for them with the stockmarket and GDP growth. So if things continue as such, he has a solid base of supporters which needs only a slight topping up from the swinging voters to ensure he is re-elected. It’s Populism pure and simple: he’s delivering for his supporters, or so they firmly believe… Making America Great Again. It’s somewhat like Joe’s popularity as Premier in Queensland (and ditto for Pauline) for all those years: what made him unpopular with common-sense people made him popular with parochial, inarticulate Queensland voters. Trump’s political INCORRECTNESS makes him enormously appealing to those who have been left behind by economic trends world-wide. They’re losers, and Trump sets out to make them feel important and listened to. They aren’t interested in the least in the world-wide political ructions that seriously worry intelligent people. Bottom line: Trump will probably be re-elected! Democrats have a chance ONLY if they can get their supporters off their arses to vote!

    • Dwight says:

      Now Bass, while I admit to being a redneck I also have degrees from two top 40 business schools.

      • BASSMAN says:

        The emphasis being on ‘business’ I note. You have answered my theme. Trump showers the rich and big business with money.

      • Dismayed says:

        Capital Investment in the US has plummeted since the tax changes, Wages have Dropped since the tax changes. Share buybacks and executive remuneration have skyrocketed . Even the Fed is trying slow down the interest rate rises because they know it will hit the poorest the hardest. No surprises.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        A redneck! With two business degrees! That’s even worse than a non redneck with two business degrees.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      It is tragic, but it’s easy to understand why those who have been left behind are attracted to Trump. The same reason they have been left behind in the first place.
      They will be even more disaffected when they find themselves worse off than before, thanks to Trump but you can bet 95% wont blame Trump because Trump will convince them that evil forces are at work preventing him from delivering.
      We at Baptiste Research are currently working on a theory proposed to us that the IQ of the average American would rise by 10 points in one month if they were denied access to television. Update coming, if we can find enough volunteers for a representative sample.

      Give ’em heaps.

  • Boadicea says:

    An astute comment from a reader in The Age.
    “There is no gang problem, there is an Airbnb problem”
    I would agree. These disastrous all-night parties where premises are trashed, the latest with tragic results, have occurred in what are euphemistically labelled “short term rentals”.
    Who would want to live in a Melbourne city apartment block these days – the comment from one long term resident who said they ignored the screams and chaos the other day because it happens all the time.
    Rentals are given mostly via a Facebook profile – which could be fake.

    • smoke says:

      should play well when some meth head decides to torch the napalm cladding

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      And that has got what exactly to do with the TDF?

    • Dismayed says:

      Chris Kenny continued to misrepresent crime stats on FOX last night when Nick Reece tried to deliver the facts CK shut it down real quick. The deliberately xenophobic bigoted divisive and false information the coalition continues to spew on Youth crime in Victoria is typical of the same demonization of whichever minority it needs to attack to secure the right wing fruit cakes votes every election. Worst government in Nations history. No surprises.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    I am sorry, Mr Insider but until I read your august column I have never heard of this Van Badham person. Does she drink coffee, catch butterflies, like animals, whatever. Bless her whoever she is. Cheers

  • BASSMAN says:

    It would be naive to think Shorten did not have a hand in the hack ban. Word is, if he wins the next election certain newspapers will be taken off the drip. I can’t see him winning on merit though. The future for Labor is not with Albo and Stan -all too close to the Gillard/Rudd stabbings, unionz. The future is with Jim Chalmers, Jason Clare, Mark Dreyfus, Andrew Leigh, Chris Bowen-all with firm groundings in economics, Ph.D’s, to boot. A front bench with these blokes would eat anything the Looters have now or could ever serve up and would go close to matching the ‘dream’ front bench Hawke had..

    • Milton says:

      Scratch Bowen from that list, Bassman. If he is part of Labor’s future then they are rooted. And strangely it seems to me that some part of his face is missing, i’m just not sure what bit.

      • BASSMAN says:

        He is the only bloke that has come up with REAL policy to eradicate the rampant debt of this Looting Mob.
        And I am NOT a Bowen lover. Ask Jack for my email. I have an audio where I tore him to bits at a public meeting of the Labor beloved. He is one of the most policy driven politicians on both sides of parliament. If he is so bad why have the Looters stolen many of his policies?

    • Bella says:

      I think Mark Dreyfus will go a long way Bassy, I like his measured responses in interviews, same with Chris Bowen. Andrew Leigh, not so much.

  • Huger Unson says:

    Given that ‘tweet’ is only a short vowel sound away from ‘twat’, I reckon you are onto a real live one, Jack.
    OTOH, the redacted words composed into proper paragraphs can be a whole lot more agreeable than the spoken “live” original, without the umms & ahhhhs, hair-stroking and assorted tics and grimaces.
    On that score you may be interested in the list of “voices” I am compiling. For the sake of nostalgia I have Peter Evans (3LO) top of list. Next, Peter Coyote (narrates Ken Burns’ documentaries) and Judi Dench. I’ll keep you informed.

  • Trabvitch says:

    Razor, JTI et al previous post.

    Following your comments, I splurged today on both Girt and True Girt. Almost had a case of puma pants after laughing so much at the first two chapters of Girt. David Hunt has a great way with words. Unfortunately I have a heap of work to do else it would have been a case of reading Girt in one sitting (or lying whatever the case may be). I enjoy reading about history and I love a good laugh. Thanks for bringing these books to my attention!

    • Razor says:

      Nearly finished True Girt Trab and it’s a cracker as well.

      If you like your history mixed with humour read the Flashman novels by the late George MacDonald Fraser.

      • Trabvitch says:

        Thanks for the pointer to Flashman. I seem to recall reading one a while ago, and I am always looking for a new series of books to read. Cheers.

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