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.
turnbull’s hypocrisy highlighted again. No surprise. there is No debate.
https://tinyurl.com/y78q76hg
Seems JTI’s article yesterday may be one of more to come. “This is obvious in both political and policy terms. The Labor Party is rolling out the largest and most comprehensive taxation reform agenda from opposition since John Hewson.” “These policies are all well thought through, progressive, pro-growth and productivity, as well as embracing inter-generational equity and Budget responsibility. Moreover they are transparent and the polity will be free to judge in advance which will give the incoming government a genuine mandate”
https://tinyurl.com/yb5txb7o
Koch brothers get another stooge into place.
http://reneweconomy.com.au/trumps-new-secretary-state-received-money-koch-industries-27093/
Whyalla wiped off the map says Abbott. Leg of Lamb $100 a kilo. Lamb is $10 kilo and Whyalla is moving ahead. the Liberals will make sure most of Gupta’s plans are stalled.
http://reneweconomy.com.au/gupta-lifts-planned-solar-rollout-to-more-than-1gw-advances-own-big-battery-98652/
Daily Market Indicator at Meat and Livestock Australia today shows trade lambs (for domestic market) average base price of 605c/kg cwt (hot carcass weight). Then add slaughter levy (a 15% tax), and traceability levy (varies but around 7%), so an all up base price closer to730c/kg. This is for the animal and its associated costs. It doesn’t include the abbatoir’s profit. And it hasn’t got to the butcher shop yet. No-one is selling prime lamb for $10/kg. Your $10/kg lamb is goat or drought affected skinny animals. Certainly not consumer prime meat.
https://www.mla.com.au/prices-markets/
A review commissioned by Turnbull led by a well known hard right economist, recommended a dividend imputation policy such as Labor’s be implemented. Treasury had been working on changes to dividend imputation ahead of the May budget, including withholding dividend cheques from non-taxpaying shareholders, before Labor announced their similar surprise measure this week. Morrison and Turnbull saw the political advantage of turning this around and using it to attack Labor-something like the carbon tax lie. Always politics before policy with this mob. Nothing ever in the national interest and they were ‘the adult’ who were going to solve the debt problem. Just about every attempt to repair the budget has been opposed by the Liberals whether Labor is in government or Opposition. Once again, Labor is very foolish for this announcement. I dunno who is advising Stan. Respected Economist Saul Eslake described the Liberals attack as “misleading” and compared it with Morrison’s negative gearing lie as we know was exposed by Treasury. Eslake says the decision to make income from super tax free is “top of my list of the dumbest tax policy decisions of the last 25 years”. Why should somebody who pays no tax be given a handful of cash he says? Nowhere else in the world does this happen.
Kangaroo Tail Stew, mmm mmmmmmm I have had this Mr Insider, its bloody delicious. Quick clip on how to best make it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyxq78TX79U
Ok Milt, AFL tips are in……..eat my dirt!
overt encouragement of coprophagia?? …mmmm. nothing to see here smoke ..move along
same, same. put mine in about 6pm. that’s 7pm your time so i’m already in front. enjoy my dust, girlfriend!!
btw, who’d ya pick??
Lucky I didn’t pick Chelski
🙂
SA will be worse of after the weekend when SA JAY just misses out.
http://insidestory.org.au/so-far-so-good-for-south-australias-energy-future/
Vale Stephen Hawking. A brilliant mind – who disproved his own theories a few times! And proved that one can beat the odds….
oh help……I’ve had an involuntary …….
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/stephen-hawking-death-dies-equation-discovery-tombstone-radiation-nobel-a8254966.html?share=77e21c62
An open mind Boa. What a loss!
The amazing and distinguished Stephen Hawking has shaken off his mortal coil. Given his disabilities, his contribution to Mankind’s knowledge was without parallel. His book ‘A Brief History of Time’ is one of the most engrossing reads of my life. So Long, and Thanks for all the Fish.