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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

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    I say Mr. Insider that rakish wretch Nick “Honey Badger” Cummins sure is pumping the new season of “The Bachelor” due to air next Wednesday. Nick, of course, a Rugby player of note. My Princess, a comely, firey Italian lass, even suggested your humble correspondent would love to change places with the Honey Badger. Quickly realising I was like a deer in the headlights I reassured her this was the “last” thing on my mind. You lucky wretch Honey Badger!
    https://tinyurl.com/ya3erlwx

  • Boadicea says:

    I won’t recontest my seat, but I’ll continue to draw my fat salary for the next 9 months – most of it on stress leave no doubt

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      Shocking, Boadicea and the Pollies wonder why we hold so many in contempt. Cheers

    • Trabvitch says:

      And then Joel Fitzgibbon, spinning like a top, said she put the Party first by resigning…

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      I doubt she had a say in the matter Boa. You know …. hot potato and all that.🔥

    • jack says:

      isn’t it OK for MPs to serve till the end of their term?

      I generally expect them to, rather than put everyone to the cost and inconvenience of another election.

      • Boadicea says:

        Well it seems her staff find it rather difficult to work in her office for starters, jack.
        Shorten is playing ducks and drakes on this trying to keep it under wraps as long as he can as he desperately needs to hang onto this marginal seat. He’s very good at it – just lies straight to the camera.
        She certainly won’t be doing anything for her electorate in the coming months. She’s in stress leave.
        One can understand the leaks- the frustration of those who see their complaints being swept under the carpet, One of those had to check into a mental health facility.
        Can you just imagine the uproar if this was a Liberal seat – or the candidate was male.

      • Penny says:

        Funny how everyone is jumping on the bandwagon on this one Jack, I too expect a politician to serve out their term. She has indicated she will not be standing again, so get over it. I am also amused that the LNP is demanding to see the results of the enquiry, when we are still waiting for the report into Barnaby Joyce investigation,….who by the way remained in Parliament despite being ruled ineligible. Wasn’t there some investigation carried out on Susan Ley as well? Michaelia Cash?
        We are in St. George in Queensland at present, just near Cubbie Station……oddly enough the area doesn’t seem to be affected by drought.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Nah, geez no jack. Every time someone makes an allegation the MP should resign forthwith!
        Enough of that old innocent until proved guilty bullsh*t! Out, out out.
        Doesn’t apply to Libnats of course, they’re angels.

    • Dismayed says:

      Yvonne also has all the evidence and has first hand knowledge of the power struggle Husar is involved in and knows 100% the unsubstantiated claims against are all true? Has Husar gifted half a $billion to her Business mates to promote themselves as clean and green? Has she set up a 2 new taxpayer funded commissions to oversee the coalitions ideological enemy instead of looking at unsafe worksites and wages theft? Has she spent untold hundreds of $millions on blatantly political royal Commissions? Has she moved an entire government department to her electorate without facilities and knowing it will cost half a $billion dollars plus the loss of the integrated departments working closely together? Has she wasted $5 billion on water schemes according to the National Auditor General? Has she placed $8 billion off budget for a rail project even though the business case says it will never recoup the build cost and will “maybe” break even if industry is forced to use it? Has she re-nationalised 25% of the Nations Energy market through purchasing off budget the Snowy Hydro scheme and then allowed it to price gouge? Has she deliberately Wrecked one of the most important National infrastructure projects purely for ideological reasons and left the Nation with an MT network that is already being overbuilt at greater $cost while the UK is laying Fibre everywhere Because the next Generation technologies wont work on copper cable? Has she created and produced and ridiculous energy “plan” designed to lock in the status quo and have NO new generation after 2020 and creating a contracts plan that assumes savings when every real industry leader says the opposite will occur because of the coalition internal fighting and inability consider the National interest.
      No Husar has done none of this but Yvonne never misses a chance to attack a progress woman. No surprises.

      • Razor says:

        I think your external locus of control is interfering with your reason. As small as it is.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Good work Dismayed. It’s clear that the supporters of this absurd incompetent corrupt government have to seize on anything they possibly can to try and divert attention away from it. This latest episode underlines that perfectly I think.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Henry.

    I’m not sure, this may have been filmed on the moon.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHvvR0S23vU

  • Milton says:

    Do afl followers think 8 weeks a fair call? Should the medical and teeth doctor bills be included? should the law be involved? I admit to not following, hence knowing, this game as closely and for as long as a good deal of the devotees on here so would prefer to hear from the insiders before I form a view. Perhaps not a bad topic for a column down the track?

    • Dwight says:

      The law should definitely be involved. This was assault and battery. To not do so gives license to others.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Jesus Christ! Nanny State! That’s just what we need, a paddy wagon on the sidelines and a bunch of coppers running onto the field to arrest a player. Actually get the coppers to umpire the matches, replete with handcuffs, the spray, the taser and Glock! Lets make it real.

      • smoke says:

        yup Matthews / Bruns like

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      No, yes, yes, maybe.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Well! A court hearing would be interesting. Mitigating circumstances perhaps? I f you want the law involved then you would have to even handed. Even elbowing a player in the ribs or pushing him in the chest is assault according to the law. And then you might have slander and claims for emotional distress.
      Gosh, AFL players would all have criminal records as long as a footy field.

      Get over it. Two weeks and a 50K fine is plenty.

      I mean, OK the victim was gentle poetic young man but…………………………………..

      https://www.ourwatch.org.au/understanding-violence/facts-and-figures

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Not sure what Boris is on about, Pommy letter boxes are red. Aren’t they?
    https://www.theguardian.com/…/boris-johnsons-burqa-remarks-offensive-foreign-offi…

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      That is indeed not Cricket, smoke, most likely a heat of the moment reaction but not sporting. Cheers

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Yes, Fiona Martin appears to be a “vile” piece of work. Ex-ABC too.

    • Mack the Knife says:

      Interesting. The curves on the graph seemed like worst case scenario though. As I’ve found out in my work though, computer modelling, even in this day and age, is never correct. Sometimes not even close.

      Liked the next vid of a young guy making a water well! Very cool.

    • jack says:

      most amusing, some of us whingeing baby-boomers are old enough to remember the Club of Rome, the coming Ice Age, the Population Bomb, etc, which is why we are sometimes sceptical about whatever is the latest catastrophe just over the horizon.

      it’s not that we are smart, in my case it certainly isn’t, its just that we have gotten used to being wrong, so much so that it has a sort of inevitability about it.

  • Razor says:

    Bella,
    Any chance of a comment on this please?

    https://www.couriermail.com.au/business/activists-the-sea-shepherd-called-out-over-adani-megamine-hypocrisy/news-story/dedc5bed0e49fa39b728e7849d8abb03

    That’s an awful lot of fossil fuels burnt and still burning!

    • Bella says:

      Mate I’ve said it before but I’ll repeat myself, I don’t subscribe to the LNP media papers you read, so no link.
      If this is about George Resources Council Christensen’s ignorant spin around the truth of the Adani scam, then I can’t help him or you understand that our current Operation Reef Defence is representing 40 other organisations & millions of Australians in the Stop Adani Alliance. Canavan & Christensen love to throw mud on dissent.
      We’re calling for an end to the risk of losing the GBR and 64,000 Reef tourism jobs, the protection of the Galilee Basin & to shut down a filfthy foreign-owned coal-mine from conducting it’s dodgy operations.

      If all of the above is not your question, please let me know, but not tonight Razor, I have a date. 😚

      • Razor says:

        Bella,
        Firstly, I hope the date went well!

        The article is about the Steve Irwin using tonnes of diesel whilst the crew protest about fossil fuels. It also comments on the amount of coal used to build it.

  • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

    “Farmers For Climate Action”, Mr. Insider. It seems Farmers in the main have recognised Climate Change many many years ago.
    https://www.farmersforclimateaction.org.au/

    • Milton says:

      Everyone with a passing awareness of earths history recognises climate change, Henry. A good deal of the earths inhabitants, especially you and I up here in God’s country, can thank our lucky stars we have had climate change. Having thrown God to the dustbin of history our garden variety atheists have elevated science as deity and they now kneel, as fellow disciples, at its altar. The yarns have changed but the parables and soothsaying remain, Henry. Let’s you and I be grateful that we are in the company, and breaking bread, with a few of this faiths apostle’s and evangelists.

      • BASSMAN says:

        ….but the RATE of change and the extremes in weather fluctuations (hot/cold) have never been as they are
        now.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Yes Milton, your elegant and excellent capture of “garden variety atheists” is spot on. They attempt to replicate the fire and brimstone preaching in the Old Testament but fall well short. Not even me old mate JB can supplicate the divine wrath element. But then again he may not be a true believer after all.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          No Carl, they do not attempt to replicate the methodology of parasitic standover merchant confabulating priests , they simply try to explain the bleeding obvious science to nongs with their heads in the sand.

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        Wonderful words of wisdom there, Milton and more credibility too coming from a fellow QLDer. Chers

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        While you are absurdly wrong and simply projecting your brainwashed belief system as a template for any philosophical belief systems, which is an utterly ridiculous and hopelessly limited way of thinking, I must say if the science of man were to be regarded as a deity it would be a bloody sight more intelligent and logical than sops who take the crowd controlling antics of ignorant desert tribesman to have some credibility. And their schizoid lunatic imagined deity.

        Yes indeed, climate change giveth life and climate change will take it away.

        • Mack the Knife says:

          Last line is a bit biblical JB. Are you saying AGW is the new deity? That would be blasphemous yeh? Better go say 10 Hail Marys & 10 Our Fathers and be contrite while you’re doing it. Haha.

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