Humble servant of the Nation

Greens Senator Lee Rhiannon’s fruity version of facts

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I have a few kangaroos loose in my top paddock. That’s not supposed to be a metaphor for a loose grip on sanity although I know some will see it as a predictable conformation.

No. I really do have Eastern Grey Kangaroos hopping past my home. I often sit outside with a cup of coffee and watch them go by.

Occasionally the big males will jump the fence and find themselves caught inside what is not much bigger than a suburban backyard, so I leave the gates open and eventually they make their own way out. Besides scaring the hell out of the cats, they do no harm and the family enjoys their random appearances.

While hardly a scientific basis for a census, I have noticed numbers of the Eastern Grey Kangaroos on the rise around my little part of regional Australia. My rough guesswork appears to be supported by the International Union for Conservation and Nature which puts Australia’s kangaroo population — Red, Western Grey, Eastern Grey and Walleroo (the four kangaroo genera that are harvested commercially) rising from 43 million in 2002 to 44 million in 2014.

Not that you’d know that if you read the New York Times which, after the US release of the film Kangaroos: A Love-Hate Story, has continued its head scratching on the Australian psyche which might otherwise be called “How appalling Australians are.

 

In this case the stereotyping has shifted to that of a nation of slavering drunks with their pig dogs blasting away with their shotties at doe-eyed kangaroos.

In a review of the film, the NYT claimed kangaroos were considered a pest by “farmers and ranchers.” What, no wranglers?

According to the NYT reviewer, Ken Jaworowski, the filmmakers offered up “images of the outback and drone footage of wild animals in their habitats” which were both “breathtaking” and designed to avoid a “non-stop focus on bloodshed.” But Jaworowski gave them two thumbs up for not flinching “from stomach-turning sights.” The review concludes, “The film isn’t pretty but its message is necessary.”

The film, as it turns out, isn’t very honest either. Critics say it fails any test of objectivity and veers directly into the polemical. But no matter, Mr Jaworowski falls into the category of believing everything he sees and more than half of what he hears without question or so it would seem.

Fortunately, other US film reviews are not so easily convinced about Kangaroo: A Love-Hate Story and have observed a sharp lack of objective facts and an unwillingness by the filmmakers to get more than one side to the a story.

I wouldn’t mind clocking the production budgets and the source of the film’s funding especially. For what it’s worth, the filmmakers claim the film was independently funded but the film’s talking head experts come from a collective of animal rights activists known bizarrely as THINKK, a group formerly based at the University of Technology Sydney and funded by animal protection charity Voiceless.

Their claims have been challenged and described as “misleading” by actual experts.

It comes as no surprise that Greens senator and spokesperson on animal welfare, Lee Rhiannon, has headed off to Europe to help launch the film. Already some of Europe’s politicians have talked about a ban of kangaroo meat based on the film’s bloody depictions and the senator shows no sign of sticking up for the $200 million industry which employs 2000 people, many of them indigenous Australians.

Rhiannon as usual cleverly avoids hard facts, preferring to doubt the data that exists in the scientific and government sectors, and opting for her own dubious assumptions.

“The commercial shooting of kangaroos is linked with serious contamination and cruelty issues,” Rhiannon said. “The fact that Russia has suspended imports of kangaroo meat three times demonstrates that there is a problem with how the Australian government is managing the commercial kangaroo industry.”

The more cynical among us might conclude that Rhiannon believes the Russians haven’t put a foot wrong since 1919 with the possible exception of Mikhail Gorbachev’s perestroika.

Russia’s reasons for suspending the import of kangaroo meat have been nominally over e. coli contamination of kangaroo meat which is odd because the meat is tested in Australia before it is packed and shipped off. On the second occasion, the suspension occurred just three months after Malaysian Airline flight MH17 was blasted out of the air. In Russia, trade and grubby politics go hand-in-hand.

Famine is inevitably driven by human factors. Name any famine in the 19th or 20th centuries and I’ll show you how dirty politics was the root cause. Crops fail, droughts occur, sure, but there is always a human being or beings that have put the preconditions for famine in place.

Much has been written regarding Rhiannon’s perceived attachment to Soviet Russia and Stalin’s failed policies which brought one of the great famines of the 20th Century into harsh reality. Arthur Sinodinos described Rhiannon as a “neo-Stalinist” in the Senate.

If she was a banner waver for the awful politics which created that huge chunk of human misery, she is now recklessly and actively pursuing another, an animal famine on this occasion that in the absence of a humane cull, would lead to an explosion of the kangaroo population and necessarily the starvation and deaths of millions of kangaroos.

All in the name of Lee Rhiannon’s fruity version of humanity.

This article was first published in The Australian on 9 March 2018.

96 Comments

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Physicist Stephen Hawking has died at the age of 76, British media is reporting his family as saying.
    He died peacefully at his home in Cambridge in the early hours of this morning, according to a statement from his family.
    “His family have kindly requested that they be given the time and privacy to mourn his passing, but they would like to thank everyone who has been by Professor Hawking’s side — and supported him — throughout his life,” the statement said.
    https://tinyurl.com/y9as6ze2

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Penny, with Jack’s indulgence I wish to respond to your March 13, at 3.44pm in the previous article – “Hang on Carl, you chastised Wraith for her statements, next thing you’re calling the public gullible and gormless.”
    You appear to have misread my comments Penny. I would never “chastise” Wraith, she is the salt of the earth and I enjoy the full blooded passion she injects into her offerings. If you care to revisit my comments I was simply conveying an ever so gentle reproof for Wraith attempting to bring pigs’ reputations into disrepute by juxtaposing them with “wilfully ignorant idiot Australians” (Wraith’s descriptor).
    Pigs are the most wonderful creatures around. They are the cleanest, friendliest, most intelligent domestic animals known. I’ve always had a soft spot for them, ever since I first heard the story about “The Three Little Pigs”. My sentimental feeling for pigs was later reinforced when I saw the movie production of “Babe”. So there you have it, whatever Wraith or anyone else thinks about Aussies, pigs are the good guys
    BTY, and I know its none of my business, but do you eat bacon?

    • Penny says:

      OK Carl, I apologize most humbly, although on another matter you did call people gormless I believe. I do eat bacon on occasion ( not easy to get in the Muslim countries I have lived) but do have an appetite for roast pork rice here in Penang. I try not to eat bacon in Australia as the portions you are served would feed a small army. I also endeavor not to think of the little pigs I am eating though. I love pigs and agree with you that they are intelligent, clean and have lovely personalities. I was also very pleased to see that sales of pork went down quite significantly after the movie Babe came out as young children could not be induced to eat pork after enquiring what happened to Babe’s mother at the start of the movie .
      Relax Carl, the “Three Little Pigs” are safe from me. I don’t even want to start discussing the way pugs are farmed in Australia, but in the US it is even worse…

    • Bella says:

      I never would’ve pegged you for a ‘Babe’ fan Carl. 🐖
      You absolute softie you….❤

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    The Federal Greens, under that nice man Richard, have been very quiet of late Mr Insider. For a Party that has been around for 26 years and still hasn’t come close to governing in their own right you would think they would be pushing harder to convince Australians they are an alternative government. Do hope also when POTUS Trump arrives on our shores they behave in a respectful manner unlike when POTUS Bush came here in 2003. A nice big vat of Tar with Feathers ready for whoever disgraces Australia I say!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j5yhhdDD10g

  • BASSMAN says:

    Nobody pays any real attention to the Greenz. They have become a protest party like Hanson. They know they will never have their hands on the levers of government so continue to make outlandish popular calls. That said I love my kangaroo fillets when I can get them at half price. Very little fat, full of protein and INCREDIBLY tender.

    Dismayed says:
    MARCH 13, 2018 AT 2:59 PM

    Of course the tax changes are are a good savings measure. The Liberals invented this tax lurk when they had rivers of money rolling in.They don’t know mainly because of their massive spending sprees.This lurk is part of Costellos $90billion structural deficit he left future governments-Morrison has NOT mentioned the 2016 Liberal deeming changes which affected more people/the increases in taxes for those earning over 80k/the cuts to penalty rates for our lowest paid workers. The 2016 deeming changes took 30 bux a week off me.Labor is HOPELESS at politics and this will be pursued right up until the election. Stupid Stan has given the Looters a HUGE free kick. They should have waited til they were in govt just like the Liberals do and THEN do the changes. Listening to Bowen they do not seem worried because it will affect mainly Liberal voters. It seems Labor is the only party trying to improve the budget bottom line…taking huge risks. The Looters cannot believe their luck and with the massive reserves that come with incumbency they will make the most of it.

  • Razor says:

    A fantastic win for the Sunshine State! This will help to replace some of the jobs the Greens have decided to destroy on the altar of virtue signalling.

    http://www.couriermail.com.au/business/queensland-wins-5b-phase-two-of-land-400-vehicle-contract/news-story/09e685789c39464fc2b8a8b0a1b5924f

    • Dismayed says:

      More pork for the seats in QLD. What does Australia need 200 tanks for? The warfare of today/tomorrow makes them obsolete already.

    • Bella says:

      Hey Razor, good to hear about those jobs but you know those Adani jobs were never guaranteed & Adani admitted in court that the number was more like 1400 with many to be automated anyway.
      Last I heard Adani claims they’re still pressing on with their proposal without our taxpayer $$$ but don’t hold your breath that’d be true.

      Ask yourself why they need to borrow a billion. If they’re so filfthy rich & determined to build their polluting monstrosity they’d back it themselves. But they won’t so why?

      I say something stinks about the whole scam & 70% of Aussies agree but you go on bashing the Greens like they’re totally responsible for the Stop-Adani or Galilee Blockade movements. I just wish they were that powerful but the reality is not that black & white. Do you actually believe that those hundreds of generational farmers ever voted Greens in their entire lives? Of course they didn’t mate but they’ve joined the fight to stop Adani because they won’t stand idly by while their only water supply is freely given to a dodgy company with a record of walking away from shocking environmental damages.

    • Lou oTOD says:

      Razor

      There’s no point continuing to provide links that hit paywalls mate, give us a precis. Sounds interesting.

  • Razor says:

    The whole kangaroo thing is just another example of the increasing divide between regional Australia and the capital cities. There’s significant anger brewing in the regions and this is the type of environment where far right parties start to get a lift. If you think a Ruby Ridge or Waco couldn’t happen here, think again. I give it about 10yrs.

  • Boadicea says:

    Another proposed attack on people’s retirement provisions. That’s not going to go down too well. I don’t care one way or the other, and am not taking a stance on this, but it seems to me that tinkering around with people’s retirement plans every few months or so is getting ridiculous. Australia has an ageing population – this is not going to go away.
    The end result of this latest idea is inevitably going to chase more people onto the pension or part pension – which will land up costing the government more in the long term.
    If it’s deemed a loophole, then grandfather the thing and apply it to new retirees or holders of shares with franking credits – moving the goalposts constantly during the game is just patently unfair,

    • Dwight says:

      It’s the constant chopping and changing that gets to me. As I’m at the age when I’m starting my planning, I am thinking seriously of taking it in a lump sum–and investing it elsewhere. I don’t trust Canberra with my retirement.

    • Dismayed says:

      Wrong as usual.

      • Dwight says:

        Christ, can you ever have an actual debate, or is that beyond your intellect?

        • Dismayed says:

          There is no debate. the double dipping lurk was wrong when introduced it is still wrong today. I wish you and Yvonne would sort yourselves out, it is Dismayed, has been Dismayed from the outset and as long as the big man JTI continues to feed his flock I will remain Dismayed. Not Christ, Not Gary, I see 2 or more Gary’s appear to be debating over the wall where Yvonnetas is commenting.? Oh dear. So again Dwight there is no debate the unfunded Howard/Costello double dipping tax rort is bad and should be removed.

      • Penny says:

        I think when the real detail comes out, people will realize that it’s a good strategy. Forget the hysteria from Scott Morrison et al, this could work. I
        We are affected too Dwight, but from what I’m hearing from our financial advisor it’s not going to affect us, you’ll probably find the same. Mind you I’m not trusting Canberra with my retirement either.

  • Tracy says:

    No Roos here, but we have a Wallaby that prowls the front of the house in the early hours, it’s eating it’s way through particular plants in my garden and the dog goes off her brain if she spots it.
    Luckily it’s mates seem to prefer snacks on the other side of the fire trail.
    This is all because the foxes around here were culled a few years ago which led to an explosion of bunnies (until they released the virus to kill those) then came Lord Voldemort the bruiser of a bush Turkey with his mates and across the road is regularly visited by an Echidna.
    More wildlife than you can point a stick at twenty minutes from the CBD.

  • Boadicea says:

    Dismayed:
    Below is an excerpt from an article titled ”The Three Stooges” written by South Australian Journalist, David Penberthy in the Australian on 10 March, 2018
    He addresses a range of issues facing the forthcoming election, including power. This is part of a longer dissertation on power – I don’t want to clog the blog with it here. But you can look the article up.

    ”And while it was the blackout that got the headlines, the bigger issue for businesses and households was the spiralling cost of power with every passing quarter. (To give you a sense, this author’s winter power bill last year for a 13-week period was $2599, a story shared by many in this town.)
    Labor desperately tried to regain control with a three-pronged strategy involving ministerial intervention in the ­energy market, state-generated back-up power and the world’s biggest battery to store energy from renewables, a deal cut as a ­result of Weatherill’s nascent bromance with Tesla founder Elon Musk. He is seeking re-election with a promise of 75 per cent renewables by 2025, a target regarded as heroic by some and insane by others, with the Liberals advocating an agnostic energy policy that potentially could include coal.”

    I doubt if Penberthy would be deliberately trying to mislead his readers about his power bill for the quarter as you claim – after all he is married to Labor MP, Kate Ellis.
    A reader ”melissa’ also comments that her bill as $2,100 for the same quarter.

    Presumably these people may not have solar/batteries etc. However your assertion that it should read ”13 months” and not 13 weeks I believe is incorrect. Nor am I ”wrong, as usual” – unless you are saying that these people are not telling the truth?

    • Razor says:

      Exactly right Boa. $900 a quarter for a family of 4 with two teenagers would be about right. This would be a family without solar. This is what I tried to explain to Dismayed last time this came up but he either could not understand what I was saying or was being wilfully ignorant.

    • Dismayed says:

      You are wrong as usual. I meant 12 months. I have man hands not little girl hands. Penberthy is a Liberal Party spruiker just like Michael Owens. You will note Ellis is giving politics away. Those getting power bills like that need to get an Electrician around because they have some sort of fault before the meter. The highest quarterly bill I have ever received was $1100.00 over a summer bill cycle and it turned out we had a fault on a piece of equipment which when calculated out accounted for $300.00 of that bill as it was drawing crazy amounts of power but we also had the Aircon. running 24/7 and had the house full of teenagers and young people the entire time for that along with fridges Freezers, Pool. Sauna etc etc etc running daily during 100 day bill cycle. The average bill in SA for 12 months is $2100.00.

      • Penny says:

        I have to say Dismayed that my sister who lives in the Adelaide Hills has never had that high a power bill either and she has a fairly large house on 10 acres. She also doesn’t have that kind a word about David Penberthy either or Kate Ellis, something to do with a case of unprofessional behaviour at a function I believe.
        I’ve always liked him personally and thinks he writes well, but then I don’t live in SA, nor have I had any dealings with them.
        It probably is time Labour lost in SA, but God help you with the lot you’re going to get.

        • Dismayed says:

          Dr Penny most here refuse to accept facts because it does not fit their narrow and selfish right wing and conservative ideology. the SA Libs Marshall, ( C. Pynes puppet) last night admitted on Fox (sky) they will cut Teachers, Nurses and Police. The SA Libs were yesterday told by the electoral commission that their “energy” Policy announcements are misleading and false. I don’t subscribe to the “its time” theory. Weatherill has been leader for almost 2 terms and has done well to lift the state. He has attracted huge amounts of investment he has reduced business taxes by over $1 billion in the last 3 budgets the budget is in surplus and debt has been reducing and is undertaking massive infrastructure programs. The SA trade balance is in the positive. His actions on Power in SA according the AEMO will reduce power cost by about 13% over the next 2 years. He cannot do anything about the Gas cartel except to invest in more generation and storage which is doing. He actually has vision for the future of SA. He refutes lies of the federal coalition and stands up for SA. The SA Libs will be an extension of the Federal Libs. Their “vision” is to cut services and take the state back to the 1950’s with coal and rote learning and handing the rest to property developers like Xenophon. who by the by the way does not want to actually win he just wants enough to be the balance of power. He is a former Lib. member and most of is candidates ore former Liberal Party staffers.

      • Boadicea says:

        Well good for you -12 weeks, 13 weeks – who cares about 7 days.
        The facts are there in black and white – he’s not lying.
        You have solar etc. He probably doesn’t and there are probably many more with the same issue. These are domestic users – i wonder how small businesses are feeling?
        The election will be a good indicator no doubt.

        • Dismayed says:

          12 Months. Get you glasses checked. Oh dear what was it you screeched again? oh yes read what is written. you are wrong as usual Yvonne or every person I know must be lying about their power bills because of the many people this has been discussed with not one family ever had anywhere near the bills of the type you continue to misinform about. You just refuse to acknowledge you would rather run ideologically driven misinformation campaigns than accept facts. No surprises. Here is my original comment to show you again. ” My winter power bill in Adelaide last year was $400. The average bill for 13 months in SA is $2100. You are wrong as usual.”

        • Penny says:

          Boa, in the scheme of things does it really matter to you? As you don’t live in SA, why are you so het up about it. Worry about things that are important to you. Give us an example of people you know personally that have these power bills or move on.

          • Boadicea says:

            There has been, and will continue to be, a lot of discussion about power and the price thereof in this country Penny. Yes it does matter to me.

        • Dismayed says:

          Very small solar package. 1.5kw. Provides between $100 -$150 per quarter in savings. So it feeds back maybe 3 or 4kw/h per day after the use of the house with everything going again teenagers young people and all the fruit uses between 16-18 kw/h per day. Not hard to work it out. I do have Led lights and newer efficient gear. Oh we don’t pay the figures quoted in the articles of 39 cents per kw/h. Again no one I have spoken to pays more than 35 cents per kw/h.

    • smoke says:

      those numbers would see a house fire from me.

      • Boadicea says:

        Agree, smoke. I use power conservatively and my bill is never more than about $200/qtr. I use wood to heat in winter – never electrticity. If i got a bill in the thousands i would consider leaving Tassie 😣
        But we have abundant hydro electricity here.
        Thinking about it, that’s probably another reason (apart from cheap property, which is becoming not as cheap as mainland investors snap it up) why we have a lot moving down here.

        • Dismayed says:

          Wood? FFS at least get a wood look gas fired heater. Redgum goes for what $350 a tonne. Much more expensive than gas and terrible for the environment and air quality. Now we know it really is last century or even the one before down there in oaky oaks. No Surprises.

        • Penny says:

          Using wood to heat your house is not exactly wise Boa. Countless studies have been done as to how much it affects the environment…..I love a wood fire too, but if you look at Launceston as one example it was proven that not only do wood fires create pollution, but the amount of wood needed just to heat one household was absolutely unsustainable

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