Thursday, May 26, 2011

In which the pond drinks heartily from the billy tea of assorted parties ...



Perhaps the silliest burst of rhetoric in the current fuss over plain packaging for cigarettes comes from Tim Anderson, courtesy of Menzies House, in How Plain Packaging Will Help Spread Terrorism.

... one fact hasn’t yet been addressed by the Australian media: The undisputed fact that it will help fund terrorists.

Fortunately Tim provides his own answer:

This may seem silly and alarmist at first glance. Terrorism financed because of plain packaging? This must just be crazy fearmongering, right? I'm being ridiculous! I mean, drugs, sure, but tobacco smuggling? Surely I've gone mad!

Mad as a march hare Tim.

I do wish at some point you learned some Photoshop skills. Replicating any kind of packaging in a trice is now just a keystroke away, and if you want decent examples, look no further than the film and television industry. I say with some modesty that even I could produce the kind of packaging you can routinely find at the Newtown street market for illegal packaged goods.

On a more sophisticated level, there's always the fifty buck "replica" watches I've used to fool my respectable Eastern suburbs acquaintances, but this year in Canal street, New York, the cops had been through the forgery market like a gust of wind from the east, and the fifty buck watch was no more.

Unhappily, according to Tim, the federal cops and customs are so inept in Australia, the Australian marketplace will be flooded with replica, plain packaged, terrorist funding cigarettes ...

Fortunately for Tim there are some sensible comments attached to his piece, and failing aspirin as a way of bringing down the fevered hysteria, he might read them and contemplate how alarmist claptrap really doesn't help the Liberal party and big tobacco save themselves.

Memo to big tobacco: forget Menzies House, and go with the Institute of Public Affairs, who know how to craft a canny libertarian message.

Or, oh heck, lash out and hire Karl Bitar, and once he's finished saving poker machines in the cause of tourism, he might be able to save the tobacco industry in the name of tourism. Just think how hideous it will be for German and Chinese tourists to be confronted by plain packaging, knowing they're directly aiding terrorism and the next Bali bombing. (Bitar says casino role is to promote tourism).

Meanwhile, while we're on the outer arm of a galaxy spiralling out of control, why not drop in on the Australian T.E.A. Party, whose site features an "iconic movie" as part of its message. After viewing this "iconic movie", allegedly inspired by Animal Farm - sue them, socialist George Orwell, sue them high, sue them low - I began to get a glimmer as to why the Australian movie industry dismally fails to connect with an audience. Enough already.

The poor hapless possums realise that realise that the Boston Tea Party provided a heaven sent marketing opportunity in the United States, but doesn't have much to do with Australia, while the mantra No Taxation Without Representation is also a particular part of American history. What to do?

... while this was part of American history the sentiment is universal.

We have borrowed and modified this saying to reflect citizens frustration with government engorgement and our apparent powerlessness to reduce or even restrict it.

"NO TAXATION WITHOUT REAL REPRESENTATION"

Does this mean we're getting unreal representation at the moment? If so, speak to Tony Abbott, or perhaps the hand ...

The sweet concerned things purport to be of no party - a Non-Party Political movement - except of course everything is dedicated to a raving conservative cause, ratbag heaven, dressed up in a house style worthy of the National Enquirer.

While the site carries all the requisite patriotic jingoistic last refuges of assorted nameless scoundrels - maps of Australia, flag waving and such like - there's a most unhealthy linking to United States fundies.

It ends up making Pauline Hanson look like someone who understood the zeitgeist. At least she could do a decent barn dance ...

Why the antipodean tea partiers don't even have a commercial relationship with whoever now owns the Billy tea brand.

My grandfather used to swear by Billy Tea. He'd make it as thick as an Irish stew, then to balance the acrid, hepped up dose of caffeine, he'd heap in spoonful after spoonful of sugar. Once the spoon could stand upright in the brew on its own, the tea was right for serving.

Oops, wait a second, are the kangaroo and the bum talking to him a couple of disreputable swaggies, relying on hand outs and bludging while they trudge the outback roads? Shame, shame, you reprehensible kanga, you're not fit to be a dinkum Aussie emblem. Get back to work you bludgers, and I guess it's back to the raving irrelevant drawing board for new dinkum Aussie symbols ...

Enough of the outer fringes.

Why go on a tour there when we always have the minions of Murdoch, and sure enough the anon edit for The Australian once again comes up trumps, fomenting class hatred and sounding exactly like ... Gerard Henderson ... of all people ... in Emu Plains subsidises Bondi:

Under Labor's solar panel program, the battlers in outer suburbs whom the party once claimed to represent were made to subsidise the green aspirations of the prosperous north shore and eastern suburbs middle classes the party once despised.

The anon edit presents no statistical data for this assertion, which seems to amount to the peculiar notion that the circa 110,000 households who have taken up the scheme reside in the north shore and eastern suburbs, and possibly subscribe to Fairfax, the fiends.

Strange then that the Wauchope Gazette should report discontent in the Port Macquarie region:

Mr Alley says the Solar Bonus Scheme was successful in the Port Macquarie electorate with many thousands of home owners taking up the opportunity to install solar panels on their rooves. (here).

Well Port Macquarie is to the north. Guys, consider yourselves promoted to the northern suburbs of Sydney, courtesy the anon edit of The Australian. Then stand by for a belting because of your wretched selfishness and Greenie ways:

Not surprisingly, the Greens, whose electoral base is professional elites in expensive suburbs and inner-city areas that formerly voted Liberal, or perhaps Labor if they work in universities, want the scheme retained and will oppose its rollback in the NSW upper house.

Funny, you know, in this capitalist age, that the question of contract law and retrospectivity is rarely raised as a key issue. Still, the notion of being arbitrarily capable of overturning an agreed and contracted deal, simply because one party no longer likes the deal, is a handy one, and perhaps should guide the pond in all its future dealings with the state government, especially when it comes to taxation. Go for it Tea Partiers, do the restrospective taxation without real representation and contractual obligation state government down ...

Of course back in the day Terry McCrann was very hot to trot on the matter of retrospectivity:

A key issue was the way the proposed tax acted retrospectively on existing projects, where much of the cost of developing them had been written off, so the tax would impact even more punitively. (here)

And again:

If you stay with the retrospectivity, you are announcing Australia had become a republic. A banana republic. Because you are effectively confiscating some part of successful projects. (here)

But that was about the mining tax and the long suffering big miners.

Mug punters from Port Macquarie are a completely different billy tea kettle of fish (and worse they use mixed metaphors).

Ain't it wondrous how simple ideological zealotry can totally obscure any real insights into who participated in the solar panels program and what might be fair compensation for those, both inside and outside certain Sydney suburbs, who took part in it, beguiled by the notion that a contract with government was more solid than a handshake with crossed fingers, only to discover that these days a contract with government is worth less than the paper it's printed on.

So what else do the Murdoch minions have going today?

Well there's Greg Sheridan once more slaying that double crossing traiterous treacherous beast Malcolm Fraser - kill the beast, kill the beast - in Fraser's unreliable memoirs rewrite history, and Gary Johns' explaining how Wayne Swan is a goose - kill the beast, kill the beast - in A ball short of a tennis match, which is a bit rich coming from a goose who somehow thinks a wayward tennis court at Nundah State School serves as a metaphor for discussing big mining and the mining tax. Call it a royalty in Wayne's Western Australian Liberal party world and perhaps the problem will be solved?

Then there's Peter Anderson explaining how the Carbon tax is a free-trade risk. Funnily enough the Kudelka cartoon attached to the story sends up Tony Abbott, and by implication, Anderson, special pleader for the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, shitless.

And then there's Ian Harper of Access indulging in special pleading and piety and semantic distortion to explain how it's a jolly good thing to keep Christian chaplains in school in the name of pluralism and pastoral care (and a little bit of Xian propaganda on the side). (A place for spiritual and ethical guidance).

But there is one shocking, disturbing omission. We're spared the daily reminder of how the NBN, or is it the ABC, are the ruination of Australia. Why it's been a full three days since Mark Day fulminated in Scott's talk of ABC being a market failure is cheap, and days and days since Mike Quigley was dusted up for all that was wrong in Alcatel, and all that's now wrong with the NBN.

Perhaps tomorrow? Surely tomorrow ...

(Below: Australians saved from terrorism because there was none of that plain packaging nonsense for decent dinkum Aussie tea back in 1910, as cheerful Ceylonese workers scoured the hilltops for the tastiest tips with which to fill the billy).

15 comments:

  1. Okay, so, as much fun as it is to mock my post, you havn't actually addressed the claims. Specifically, a)trademarks are a very strong protection against counterfeiting and piracy of goods, and through plain packaging removing them, smuggled and counterfeit tobacco will increase (a fact conceded by most of the proponents) and b)that there is a proven relationship between tobacco smuggling and terrorism, and one that is set to increase.

    Considering the U.S. House of Representatives report stated that in New York alone there was 200-300 thousand dollars in tobacco smuggling occuring _a week_, ( and that "a large percentage of the money is believed to be sent back to the Middle East, where it directly or indirectly finances groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas, and al-Qaeda.”), and the U.S. has far, far stricter customs and law enforcment operations on such things than we do, I think you dismiss my argument that it is something the the AFP will fail to adequatly police too simply.

    Furthermore, re the IPA arguments, if you want a standard libertarian response to this along IPA lines, feel free to read my earlier posts on it linked at the bottom, or, better still, my lengthy senate submission (also linked).

    I agree this is a side issue, and not the main argument against plain packaging. But nevertheless, it is not one that should be dismissed as easily as it is simply because people associate the term terrorism with fearmongering.

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  2. Supporting terrorism, and thereby funding more Bali or similar bombings and mayhem is a side issue?

    Surely you jest? if it means the jihadists get cash, then it must be fundamental, n'est-ce pas?

    I actually suggested pond readers read the comments on your commentary as a way of addressing your arguments - who knows if they'll follow the advice - because quite a few of the comments found waving the terror flag using US statistics and proximity to Asia alarmist fear mongering (a notion you tried to pre-empt, but thereby gave away the game). And speaking of failing to answer arguments ... perhaps you could take up some of your site's readers' thoughts?

    Simply to propose that it will happen, without evidence that it is currently happening or is likely to happen, does indeed make it a side issue.

    Let the world, the AFP, Customs and the various governments of Australia know when you can turn it into a fundamental, and genuinely alarming front and centre issue ...

    Meanwhile, I'll stick with those who found it a tad easy to dismiss as a secondary side issue cheap argument.

    Paranoid fantasies and the sky falling in - especially if it seems to be falling in every second day for poor old hapless big tobacco - isn't the basis for a sound discussion of policy.

    And please note trademarks aren't a strong protection against counterfeiting and piracy of goods, as a quick visit to the fly by night handbag stands in Marrickville Metro will tell you - unless you want me to whip up a hard to spot counterfeit DVD for you, which will probably take me all of fifteen minutes. Maybe you need to get down and dirty with the pirates a little more?

    Please show an awareness of actual happenings in the retail world before making specious assertions.

    If piracy and cigarette smuggling is rife in the United States, the home of brands and trademarks and copyright and yadda yadda, and helping to fund terrorism, what benefit putting cigarettes in fancy wrappers in the United States? Or elsewhere? The logic you deploy is circuitous and self-defeating.

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  3. From Tim's argument, does it follow that we should not only legalise heroin, but brand and market it too?

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  4. At the least it suggests that branding is for selling, and using trademarks to stop piracy is like waving a flag at an oncoming bus, because a trademark without effective enforcement mechanisms is singularly useless.

    As the Chinese know only too well, where piracy is now sophisticated and entrenched, with (a) legitimate factories, who often make goods for brand name companies, producing fakes out of hours which might be very accurate fakes, or (b) illegitimate factories which churn out fake fakes or illegal goods without regard to quality control, including cigarettes, all prettied up in brand name packaging, because hey, that kind of ribbon is cheap.

    Tim's line is very reminiscent of all the music and film industry explanations of how piracy is ruining the game, and the world, and who knows, might be funding terrorism.

    Without vigorous law enforcement involving in this country public servant coppers, it's so much blather, especially if it's a civil offence involving civil penalties.

    Which is probably why the Newtown coppers ignore the pirated goods under their noses each weekend market, because they've got bigger fish to fry ... unless of course they're making a point about Barry O'Farrell's industrial strategies ...

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  5. It may well be a problem with my browser, so might I ask, is anyone else here able to read my last posts responding to Dorothy Parkers claims?

    It seems to no longer show up on my screen since posting, so am wonderign if it's a glitch in blogspot, a glitch in my browser, of if, perhaps, my lawst posts were accidentally deleted... As they definately came up on screen after I hit "post" :)

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  6. David Irving (no relation)May 26, 2011, 5:23:00 PM

    Mr Andrews seems to be a bit thin-skinned, Dorothy. Is he a journalist, or something?

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  7. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  8. Sorry Tim, here no censorship, no censorship here re your posts (no cash either). So we have to settle for a glitch, browser or google - I never let capitalist internet giants off the hook - and a koan:

    Three things are certain:
    Death, taxes and lost data.
    Guess which has occurred.

    Or a couple of other koans varied to suit the situation:

    You step in the stream
    But the water has moved on.
    This comment is not here.

    Rather than a beep
    Or a rude error message
    These words: Comment Not Found

    Having been erased
    The comment you’re seeking
    Must now be re-typed.

    A comment that big?
    It might be very useful.
    But now it is gone.


    And so on ...

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  9. Unfortunately when someone declares the Cato Institute as "Non Partisan" with regards to the tobacco industry, their credibility vanishes. In fact the term "intellectual laughing-stock" is hardly too strong. Tim Andrews is just plain embarrasing.

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  10. Mmmm, my reservations regarding Tim began with this post:

    http://www.vexnews.com/news/4281/babes-of-liberal-tims-angels-show-a-new-dawn-is-about-to-break-for-australian-conservative-politics/

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  11. It wasn't so much that as that every second person in the photos seemed to be reading Ayn Rand:


    ... it was revealed in the recent "Oral History of Ayn Rand" by Scott McConnell (founder of the media department at the Ayn Rand Institute) that in the end Ayn was a vip-dipper as well. An interview with Evva Pryror, a social worker and consultant to Miss Rand's law firm of Ernst, Cane, Gitlin and Winick verified that on Miss Rand's behalf she secured Rand's Social Security and Medicare payments which Ayn received under the name of Ann O'Connor (husband Frank O'Connor).

    As Pryor said, "Doctors cost a lot more money than books earn and she could be totally wiped out" without the aid of these two government programs. Ayn took the bail out even though Ayn "despised government interference and felt that people should and could live independently... She didn't feel that an individual should take help."

    But alas she did and said it was wrong for everyone else to do so.


    Rand was a heavy smoker and died of lung cancer, which in a serendipitous way brings us full circle.

    Is the story urban internet myth, or a sensible adjustment to reality and a safety net? We just cut and paste in a fair and balanced way ... you decide.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-ford/ayn-rand-and-the-vip-dipe_b_792184.html

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  12. David Irving (no relation)May 27, 2011, 3:50:00 PM

    Scott, I guess the take-home message from the article you linked to is that even a glibertarian can get a root if they ask enough people.

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  13. Or perhaps love is blind(drunk).

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