Humble servant of the Nation

Surviving the plastic bag donnybrook

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This week the nation has witnessed distressing images of forlorn supermarket shoppers breaking down and weeping at self-serve check-outs.

Teary shoppers had forgotten or perhaps they had remembered and should have forgotten. It’s hard to say. We can’t be sure anymore. On Wednesday, Coles lifted their ban on single use plastic bags and within 24 hours restored it.

Where it could lead today is anybody’s guess. Perhaps we’ll be asked to roll barrels to the shops, leading to a brief boon for struggling coopers before the supermarkets change their minds again.

Just yesterday I observed a shopper decline the offer of free plastic bags to pack what looked like the proceeds of a shopping list for the looming apocalypse.

The woman piled her fare bagless into her trolley, leaving it loaded to the gunwales to the point where a major industrial accident was in the offing. She weaved her trolley crazily from the check-out to the car park. As it transpired the journey was the easy bit. She hurled her goods into the back of her SUV, one by one, only to see many of them roll out and crash to the floor.

It was like watching a bad juggler in action. There was milk, eggs, Tim Tams, Dettol, toothpaste, talcum powder and something called Primal Strips Vegan Jerky hitting the deck. Ironically, the paper towel stoically remained in the back of the car.

I was going to offer my assistance, but the shopper had that look of a person who, once her shopping was secured, would commence scanning the horizon for the nearest clock tower, so I thought it politic to leave her be.

Why Coles executives changed their minds and then changed them again is anybody’s guess.

I do have one theory. Perhaps Coles had engaged in a marketing exercise of the 1985 New Coke variety. The marketing brouhaha never made it to our shores, but it involved placing a new version of Coke on the market with the threat, old Coke, the one consumers had enjoyed for nearly a century, would be phased out.

I was in the US at the time and virtually anywhere I went resonated to the sound of people sampling Coca-Cola’s New Coke. Almost invariably consumers were left grimacing and gasping as though they’d stood in line for their beverages at Jonestown.

For a couple of months, Coca-Cola’s share price veered up and down and around and around. Executives were in a state of panic. Some went to rehab. Others took the company pistol and were never seen again. Finally, the company acknowledged what pretty much everyone else already knew. New Coke tasted like a sugary form of strychnine. It was never going to fly.

New Coke got old and old Coke was new again.

The decision to drop New Coke was said to be an embarrassing backflip for the Atlanta-based soft drink giant. While it has never been openly acknowledged, Coca-Cola had engaged in an elaborate stunt. When the dust settled, and soft drink order was restored, Coca Cola had increased its market share. Take that, Pepsi.

Was Coles’ marketing gymnastics serendipitous or calculated? Remember, one man’s gibbering paranoia is another’s heightened state of awareness. What we can safely say is, in the marketing world the Wildian rule applies: “There is only one thing in life worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.”

I have genuinely enjoyed the single-use plastic bag donnybrook in recent weeks. It is testament to this nation’s can-do-but-probably-won’t-and-besides-there’s-something-good-on-the-telly-so-can-you-please-go-away attitude.

It’s difficult to avoid the notion that we are being played New Coke style. Prior to the bans, I was in the habit of finding a second application for single-use plastic bags, namely inserting them in the kitchen tidy as bin liners.

Now I know I probably couldn’t get a patent up on this invention. I think one or two Australians might have thought of it first. And like me, these people no doubt have found they now have to buy actual bin liners and use them at approximately the same rate. I doubt what’s happening here is reducing the petrochemical-intense plastics manufacturing process or even saving ocean fauna to the point where we could end up hip-deep in turtles at some vague point in the future. But what do I know? I’m just a consumer.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the argument, one amusing proposition is that reusing plastic or cloth bags at the check-out could lead to a mass outbreak of some disgusting disease. Hepatitis. Malaria. Hook worm parasites. Necrosis and buboes. Bring out your dead. I’m not so worried about encephalitis. To be honest, I could do with a lie down.

Have these people ever been out the back of a supermarket? The ones I’ve seen are filth-encrusted disgraces. Bacteria the size of small cars. A clumsy storeman could drop a couple of hundredweight of Roma tomatoes on the deck. The five second rule not only applies, it’s been stretched to a neat two hours.

Give those toms a wash before you pop them on a sandwich and they’ll come up trumps.

Of course, it’s entirely possible Australians don’t like being told what to do and where the forgetful or the intransigent are concerned, they must endure a levy on their goods just so the supermarkets can pretend they care.

Banning unpleasant things is plain dumb. It sets an ugly totalitarian tone for governments and corporations alike. Government responsibility should begin and end at giving people genuine fact-based information and then sitting back and allowing them to make informed choices.

After that we’ll let governments know when we need them. Don’t call us et cetera etc.

This article was first ;published in The Australian on 3 August 2018

304 Comments

  • Milton says:

    I should I also don’t like public types (mainly politicians) who exploit their family for their own image or career. There’s no need for the public to see whether a politician has the perfect nuclear family as a means to deciding whether they are capable to do a job. The emphasis on Gillard’s background was a complete nonsense. This type of puerile interest goes some way to lowering the level of political debate and ensuring a paucity of worthy candidate’s.

  • Milton says:

    If something is newsworthy fair enough, but being Lucy’s nephew of Ray Hadley’s son shouldn’t make it so. I tend to feel sorry for the families of “public identities” except those like the Markles who exploit the second hand “fame” for their own pocket.

  • Milton says:

    Never!!

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Worldwide Wildfires, Droughts, Earthquakes and more, Mr. Insider. Are we perhaps seeing the start of the Biblical Armageddon? Dear Mr. Baptiste has been warning us of Climate Change for a long time just perhaps there is a “glimmer” of truth in what he says? Perhaps time to build a new “Ark”.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Racing at Fannie Bay Racecourse in Darwin today, Monday, Mr. Insider as the Darwin Cup is run and won. Almost 40,000 gather to enjoy the event and its gaining momentum. I hear the “after race” frivolities” would make a Vicar blush, but that’s another story. Go hard NT I say.
    https://tinyurl.com/y749lmpj

  • Milton says:

    Fortunately for all his fans on here, Peter Dutton has survived the Lombok earthquake.
    Elsewhere that Tim Southwhatsisname is still on his witch hunt for racists. God knows where his next highly paid (by the taxpayer) job will be.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      “No Surprises” there Milton, I am a fan of Pete but feel he may have a bit of trouble hanging onto his seat here in QLD at the Federal Election, which he holds by a slim 2%. Cheers

    • BASSMAN says:

      Probably collecting nearly half a billion with those for blokes Malcolm gave all of that money to
      to check the Barrier Reef! Geez when you add up the hundreds of millions since 2013 The Looters have given their lawyer mates to run Royal Commissions to entrap Labor (not ONE conviction), the millions in jobs the Looters have given to their mates in gigs that were tossed out at the last election (Soapy Mirabella, Peter Hendy and others), The Treasury job and the Productivity job to ex Liberal staffers…for Christ sakes will somebody call the police or do i need to go on? Of course most of this will be donated back at election time. No problem about a shortage of campaign funds this time.

      • Bella says:

        Yep, call the cops Bassy, the corruption is breathtaking.
        Imagine the blowback if Labor did the same.
        Turncoat’s willingly aiding & abetting the theft of taxpayer dollars to a totally shady ‘GBR’ group made up by the resources sector. Call 000, it can’t wait ’til May.

      • Razor says:

        There are still people before the courts Bassy so to say no convictions is not correct. Just saying……

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Sixty bucks! Hipster prices.

      Still have one Mack, wonderfully economical, knocks 50% off the shopping bill with that built in false bottom.

    • Bella says:

      What a find MtK!
      What can I say, I’m a retro girl. 😄

    • Penny says:

      That’s the one I had when I was in my 20s Mack…..I used to go the Vic Market at 12.00 on Saturdays and you could buy half a lamb for $10 and of course all the fruit and veg they were throwing out for next to nothing as well. My friends were too embarrassed to go with me because of that shopping cart, but hey they were all happy to buy my goodies…….I used to stick it in the back seat of my VW and off I’d go. I didn’t go every Saturday mind you, but the guys at the market got to know me and they’d save the best bits. I loved my little shopping cart, should get another one, now that I’m in the right age group to use one. My mum used to walk “up the street” with hers every day, sure beats a walking frame

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Yeah, nah, maybe, theres a lot of security cameras about these days. Get your sleight of hand off pat and you should be OK.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    Goodness me, Mr. Insider, I did not think any would be still flying, may the dead RIP, and of course, I refer to the fatal crash of a WW2 German Junkers Ju 52 in the Swiss Alps. Its operator, JU-Air, has been running sightseeing tours for almost four decades using a squadron of German-made vintage aircraft.
    https://tinyurl.com/y6u82mqd

  • Dismayed says:

    Here is another look at the NEG “modelling” which again shows the Nation is better off without it. The coalition are running another deliberate misinformation campaign. Absolutely disgraceful. Due to internal coalition politics the Nation is being conned. No surprises.
    https://reneweconomy.com.au/energy-insecurity-board-and-its-modelling-spreadsheet-72226/

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Good one Dismayed. The government isn’t working for the people who elected it. As you say, no surprises.

    • Bella says:

      At best there’s no ‘guarantee’, it is deceitful hogwash.
      Nobody’s going to find their electricity bills suddenly discounted by five hundred odd dollars but it will end investment in renewables.
      As you keep saying Dismayed, no surprises, from a government run by their donors. How stupid do they think we are?
      Turncoat has proven over & over again that he’s completely beholden to his dumb men of the far right who want everyone to join them in rewarding their increasingly desperate mining donors, by closing-off the rapidly growing renewable investment sector.
      It appears that conning the states may be a cake-walk too.
      It’s a shock to me that anyone out there still believes all the lies.

      • Razor says:

        Bella,
        Dismayed kept telling us that renewables were cheaper and a stand alone investment. IF what he has been saying for the last couple of years is true then there will continue to be significant investment in renewables. If what he has been saying is a bare faced lie and reneweconomy is just a journal for like minded rent seekers then they may be in trouble. Solid, cheap, clean and reliable base load coal and gas power will still be available if the last scenario is true so never fear.

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