John Bishops' Communications Line - 31 July 2008
John Bishops' Communications Line – July 31 2008
What makes a conservative?
Demonising the right is always a popular left wing pastime. (It happens in reverse too.) Chris Trotter's column in the Sunday Star Times of 20 July was one of the more outrageous examples where he bitterly attacked 'the cockies, the rich and the reactionaries. " Another example - this time in the guise of academic research - came to my attention last week.
I attended a seminar by Victoria University academic, psychologist Marc Wilson, on Voting Behaviour. According to Mr Wilson being conservative is associated with racism, sexism and authoritarianism.
Mr Wilson's model comes from the USA and seeks to explain voting behaviour by juxtaposing attitudes to freedom and equality. Conservatives (National) value freedom more; while liberals (Labour, Greens) value equality more.
From his New Zealand research he claims that voting National correlates with support for the use of animals in research, support for genetic engineering, red meat consumption, sexism, materialism, racism and hierarchy enhancing occupations (although he added that the correlations with being a Republican were stronger in the United States.)
However the New Zealand correlations aren't much above 0.50 (some were below). In other words, there are a lot of other things happening for which his model does not account.
I pointed out to Mr Wilson that by associating conservatives in general, and National in particular, with racism, sexism and authoritarianism he had done a good job of demonising the right, a claim he did not deny. "It's just the way the data turned out", he said. No comparable analysis of the associations of 'liberal' was offered.
I think his approach is wrong. For a start liberal and conservative aren't polar opposites in New Zealand as Mr Wilson seems to think. Secondly much of our political history has been about what left wing economist and public servant Bill Sutch called the quest for security. Much of the impetus for the welfare state and the ordered economy was about trying to prevent and avoid the economic upheaval and social chaos caused by the Depression and the vagaries of economic cycles.
Although the welfare state sounded radical in the 1930s, it was not socialism. It was fundamentally about securing stability for the working and lower middle classes. These people may have been economically progressive, but they were social conservatives as anyone who campaigned for liberal causes in the Labour Party of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s recalls only too well.
To be liberal could be "socially liberal" , that is tolerant and accepting or it could be "economically liberal" in the tradition of John Stuart Mill through to Hayek and Friedman. It's possible to be low on one of those dimensions and high on another. Liberal isn't necessarily left or centre left in New Zealand, as it might be in the US. Overall I concluded this was a rather slight and shallow exercise, which did the presenter no credit. I support academic freedom, but as a paying customer, I expected something better than some rehashed model of the 1970s imported from the United States and applied to New Zealand without any recognition of the different historical conditions and political traditions.
Candidates at the Chamber
One observation by Wilson that conservatives talked about freedom while liberals talked about social justice was borne out in a forum for the Wellington Central candidates in this year's general election. At yesterday's forum, hosted by the Wellington Regional Chamber of Commerce, Labour's Grant Robertson referred to his "strong sense of social justice" and his commitment to "a fair and inclusive society." National's Stephen Franks talked of economic decline. "If this country doesn't reverse (current policies).our kids will inevitably go overseas and stay there."
Robertson's mantra - "strong economy, fair society, sustainable world" - contrasted with Franks' "almost all the policies adopted by the Labour government have prevented us from going up the OECD economic rankings as a country." ACT's Heather Roy said that as polling showed that "Epsom was in the bag, all party votes for ACT would now count". ACT wanted 5% - 6% economic growth per year and had a 20 point plan to achieve that.
United Future's Vaughan Smith recognised "a big movement for change in this election", but the Green's Sue Kedgley saw it as a defining moment when voters would choose the Green vision of a transformed economy with less dependency on oil, fewer carbon emissions and affordable and efficient public transport.
Life after Veitch
It's all gone quiet on the Tony Veitch front, and the nation has breathed a huge collective sigh of relief that we are no longer affronted by the domestic troubles of a mouthy sportscaster. The question of whether an assault took place is now being investigated by the police, and that's the proper process. It's not something an employer or the media can do properly.
In my view there is one, and really only one, important question. What did Tony do to Kristin on that night in January 2006? Did he, as initially reported, hit her so hard that she needed hospital treatment and was in a wheel chair for weeks? What physical damage did he do when he "lashed out" as he put it? No violence is acceptable, but here the scale matters because it influences opinion about whether his confession and apology on TV were enough or not. He might get away with some slapping and punching, but violent kicking is a different matter entirely.
That's too much for your mates to justify or explain away, for Veitch and Dunne-Powell to cover up by a private agreement and monetary compensation, for an employer to ignore, or for the public to forgive, however abject the public apology and whatever acts of contrition and penance he might undertake.
But let's not forget the story in the Sunday Star Times of 20 July where Donna Chisholm reported "sources say Dunne-Powell walked out of hospital after treatment following the assault and did not leave in a wheelchair." (as claimed in the original DominionPost story). Chisholm began the story. "Tony Veitch's former lover Kristin Dunne-Powell returned to the broadcaster's Auckland home for a Valentine's Day visit just two weeks after the assault which allegedly broke her back, the Sunday Star-Times has been told."
If accurate, the lower scale of injury is consistent with Veitch's "lashed out" version (with its implication of momentary rage and no lasting harm, which makes his contrition easier to swallow). If it is not accurate and the police find a serious physical beating took place resulting in significant hurt and harm to Kristin, then walking away from his two jobs will be the least of Veitch's problems.
Mervyn Thompson recalled
Those with long memories may recall the late Mervyn Thompson, a drama lecturer at Canterbury University, who later moved to Auckland University. Mervyn - or Proc as he was known after playing Proculeius in Ngaio Marsh's production of Antony and Cleopatra - had a reputation for not treating women well. In 1984, he was attacked by a group of women, stripped naked, tied to a tree, and left there with a sign 'rapist' hanging around his neck. The perpetrators were never found, and the incident hastened his death, his friends say.
Essayist Patrick Evans said in "Whipping up a local culture: Masochism and the cultural nationalists" that "the public rape of Thompson was probably the most successful planned interruption of the status quo this country has ever seen, sending a shudder through New Zealand manhood that permanently transformed gender relations in New Zealand universities (for example) overnight and - aided by the victim's unquenchable desire to talk about it in public- threw into the public arena the entire issue of how men have related to women over the years."
Will the Veitch incident be remembered in the same way? That will largely depend on the outcome of any criminal proceedings that might be brought, or on what his former partner Kristin Dunne-Powell might (eventually) choose to reveal.
Sian Elias attacks the boys' club
The Chief Justice's speech to a conference of women lawyers in Australia last month is attracting a good deal of attention for its outspokenness. "I didn't think members of the Establishment were supposed to say things like this", is just one of the astounded but favourable comments coming from women lawyers. "Gobsmackingly good" was another verdict on the speech.
On women getting ahead, the Chief Justice says "as it is becoming clearer that the impediments to women's participation in the legal profession are not confined to those that block the door but include patterns of behaviour and work which women do not accept or cannot meet, strategies for overcoming these impediments may collide with legal culture or give rise to fears that women are to receive advantages. Young women with family responsibilities cannot keep up with ridiculous billing hour requirements or demonstrate commitment by working unhealthy work hours. Nor should their male colleagues, but they seem more willing to do so. And if they are, the chance for a shift in the legal culture recedes and accommodation for others is resented as favoured treatment. Those who obtain it are said to "lack commitment". Even on the bench, strategies to relieve women judges with young children of circuit responsibilities may not be well-received. And yet in the United Kingdom growing fears are being expressed that qualified women are turning down appointment to the bench because of such inflexibility."
She recalled the career of Ethel Benjamin, one of the first women to be admitted to practice in 1908, and noted that she was frozen out of the profession in Dunedin and eventually left the country. "When Silvia Cartwright (the first woman Judge of the High Court and later Governor-General of New Zealand) applied for jobs in Dunedin in the 1960s she encountered some reserve because of the example of Ethel Benjamin "and the trouble she caused".
"I am very conscious that I accepted appointment to the bench in 1995 at the urging of male colleagues, whose view (based on their lack of success in recommending me for briefs) was that I would never get instructed in the cases I aspired to lead. I went on the bench to practise law."
The full speech has been posted at
Gender politics Hillary Clinton's loss to Barack
Obama in the race to be the Democratic Party's candidate for
President has been much discussed and is seriously regretted
by sections of women in the USA, a mood also reflected by
some in New Zealand. Hillary was a serious contender and
therefore should have been supported by all women who care
about their gender, one line of argument runs. Her failure
to get the nomination is then seen as an anti-feminist move.
"If not now, then when" is one catch cry. The
underlying message is that a woman should be President
before a black. That's an interesting, even a provocative
call, and it's becoming the new test of feminism. In this
view of the world, many other factors, normally regarded as
important in a political contest are cast aside. For
example, with Hillary you get Bill, and some US voters
people saw that as a problem. Many Americans wanted to move
on from the Clinton Bush wars. She wasn't as inspiring as
Obama. He was more electable because the religious right,
the conservatives and the Clinton haters would have gone all
out to beat her. (Hillary is Satan, conservative talkback
host Don Imus labeled her). Obama raised more money, won
more contests and got more delegates. What's wrong with
electing a representative of a repressed and exploited
minority; isn't that a triumph for democracy? These are
just some of the practical issues raised about Hillary's
candidacy. They don't matter, the pro-Hillary argument
runs. Hillary is a woman and it's time to have a woman. End
of debate. It's an ideological position; an assertion of
faith and belief. It's politics defined by gender. It's
women supporting women because they are women, not because
of their specific policies and personal values, or taking
account of factors like their appeal to the electorate, the
stance of their opponents, or the personal strengths and
weaknesses of the candidate concerned. I am not taking
sides, just observing what others say and believe.
Attack ads We can't do this in New Zealand, and we
couldn't do it even before the Electoral Finance Act, but
it's all legal in the USA. It's the attack ad. Here
are two examples. The Republicans are going after Al
Franken, a Democrat who is standing against the incumbent
Republican Senator in Minnesota. Al Franken is an actor and
comedian who appears regularly on the long standing show,
Saturday Night Live. See
Also,
here's the latest McCain attack ad on Obama following his
European trip. It has fleeting shots of Britney Spears and
Paris Hilton.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHXYsw_ZDXg&eurl
Despite the rapturous reception Obama got in
Europe, the polls have gone bad for him in the US. In the
latest USA Today/Gallup poll, McCain is ahead 49 to 45,
among likely voters. The same poll a month ago had McCain
behind by six percent. In the Electoral College, based on
state by state results which determine the election, Obama
is ahead by just six votes out of 538. Obama had been
consistently ahead in the polls, but has lost momentum in
the daily tracking polls, with commentators now saying that
his international trip has gone down badly at home,
particularly his decision to cancel a visit to a military
hospital in Germany because TV crews weren't allowed in.
"John McCain always has time for the troops" were the
concluding words of a McCain TV commercial airing this
week. Who's going to win and why - call
me There's lots of polling data and there's plenty
of information about the economic and social context in
which the general election in New Zealand will take place.
What is the mood of the nation and what's driving attitudes
and opinions? A client asked me to pull it all together and
to tell them what businesses might expect from a National
government (assuming they win). You can share in this
knowledge through a presentation to your chosen audience.
Please call me. Prescient on
China "Let China sleep, for when she wakes the
world will tremble." David Niven's character, the
British Ambassador Sir Arthur Robinson, quotes Napoleon
(without attribution) in 55 Days at Peking, a 1963 film
about the Boxer Rebellion in China in 1900. It screened on
MGM this week, and Niven's words sounded rather prescient
after 45 years - and Napoleon, who died in 1821, is even
more insightful. Globalisation is a
plus One issue that has sparked a fierce war of
words - as well as battles on the streets - is
globalisation. Tyler Cowen, a professor of economics at
George Mason University, who has been a guest of the
Business Roundtable in New Zealand argues that globalisation
has benefited American families in just the same way as
Kiwis have had access to cheap clothing, shoes and cars,
following deregulation and the opening up of our
economy. Cowen argues that "trade with China has
already eased hardships for poorer Americans. A new research
paper by Christian Broda and John Romalis, both professors
at the Graduate School of Business at the
He says that people are
naturally suspicious about trade with foreigners, despite
the proven benefits. Free trade advocates should not shrink
from their tasks he says. "If we are too apologetic about
globalisation, we can feed core irrationalities, instead of
taming them. The risk is that we will frame trade as a
fundamental source of suffering and losses, which would make
voters more nervous, not less. It is wrong to play down the
costs of globalisation, but the reality is that we've been
playing down its benefits for a long time. Politicians
already pander to Americans' suspicion of foreigners. There
is no need for the rest of us to jump on this bandwagon.
Instead, we need more awareness of the cosmopolitan benefits
of trade and the often hidden - but no less real - gains for
ordinary Americans." Spin of the week The
All Blacks Wallabies match last Saturday was hyped as a
clash of the coaches, but after the All Blacks lost (got
thumped, were outclassed, whatever) does Graham Henry
acknowledge his role? Nope. When you drop as much ball as
the players did, he said, you can't expect to win. So it's
the players' fault - and perhaps it is, but that excuse sits
oddly with the deliberate emphasis on the coaches. Henry
must have been informed that was the way our emotions were
to be jerked by the spin doctors to arouse interest in this
test, which makes his avoidance of responsibility for the
loss all the more brazen and all the more galling.
What's good about annual reports? One wag once said
that a company's annual report was read more often before it
was published than after, and that's probably right. But
some organisations do make extraordinary to project their
values and achievements through their annual
report. Wellington City Council won the Institute of
Chartered Accountants supreme award for best annual report
this year - for the second year running. See
But
there were other winners and important lessons to be learned
from a careful analysis of what makes a winning annual
report. Disclosure of information and good pictures made the
difference. See
What's in a name? Quite a lot is you are called
Talula Does The Hula From Hawaii, and the Family Court Judge
who ordered a new name to be found created quite a talking
point - and a useful diversion from the weather. I recall a
relative who taught kindergarten in South Auckland. She had
kids called Baked Beans, Watties, and TV2 in her class.
Parents may think that odd sounding names and weird
spellings are cute, but they do impose burdens on their
children. In the Talula case, my view is that the
parents are clearly insensitive and stupid. One of them
came up with the name and the other agreed. This sort of
person ought not to be allowed to breed. In other
developments Stuff reported that the mother who called her
daughter "Spiral Cicada" had defended her choice, and the
Registrar-General of Births, Deaths and Marriages, Brian
Clarke, said some of the names mentioned in reports quoting
the Family Court Judge had not been registered. "The names
Fish and Chips, Masport and Mower, Yeah Detroit, Stallion,
Twisty Poi, Keenan Got Lucky and Sex Fruit have not been
registered." Annoying stuff Fourteen
teams, 13 rounds and the Wellington Rugby Union's website
displays who is playing whom and where for only 10 of the
games, and for one of those it has Wellington playing Otago
in Whangarei. Hello! Normal lending criteria applies..a
radio advertisement for Newbolds. Since when was 'criteria'
singular? Foodstuffs and Meadow Fresh have a falling
out over terms of supply for dairy products and the upshot
is that NewWorld doesn't stock Meadow Fresh any more. I
liked Meadow Fresh and want to buy that brand. I can't
anymore. Two companies have an argument they can't resolve
and the customer loses choice. How is that a good
outcome? Funeral for audio tapes There was
a funeral the other day in the Midtown offices of Hachette,
the book publisher, to mourn the passing of what it called a
"dear friend, US media newsletter Levene Breaking News
reports. "Nobody had actually died, except for a piece of
technology, the cassette tape. While the cassette was dumped
long ago by the music industry, it has lived on among
publishers of audio books. Many people prefer cassettes
because they make it easy to pick up in the same place where
the listener left off, or to rewind in case a certain
sentence is missed. For Hachette, however, demand had slowed
so much that it released its last book on cassette in
June." Michael Jordan on failure. "I have
missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost
almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to
take the game winning shot and missed. I have failed over
and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed."
ENDS