Prebs Rebs - following Mad Dog - Young Labour
Future Lefts Monday 31 January, 2000
`Come and get me, filthy Tory'
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CONTENTS: Editorial: Mad Right-Wingers, and "We Won The War" A response to last week's column Rebels misfire again! The News - Silly Season Over; Politics is Happening Again! Web site of the week
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Editorial - Mad Right-Wingers, and "We Won The War"
Well well, we have thrown the cat among the pigeons haven't we?
Last week's Future Lefts led to all sorts of reactions. The Prebble's Rebels in a dimwitted media release on Tuesday (http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0001/S00027.htm) engaged in a lengthy discussion of my apparent left wing lunacy which led to a response from me (further down in this newsletter) criticising their personal attack on me. Next thing I know, I'm being commented about on the Rebels web forum, and, perhaps most spectacularly, in the latest issue of `New Write', which is the figment of the imagination (overactive, in my opinion) of one Philip Rennie. It's been a busy week!
I won't dedicate space to the Young Nats here, but have a look at their column. It's great fun; you can find it at http://www.youngnats.org.nz/newwrite28jan2000.htm and it is a spectacular read. I strongly, strongly advise anyone reading this column to go and have a look at it. Nowhere in politics have I ever seen anything that is so embarrassing to the sponsoring organisation.
But on to real politics.
One of the most revealing things with respect to the `born to rule' attitudes of the Nats is the way they can't seem to understand that the rollback of their nine year project to destroy the welfare state isn't going to be distracted by their ranting. I am referring specifically to the continual stirrings over the restoration of ACC as a public service, the carping about the tax increase on wealthy New Zealanders, and the restoration of some union rights in the work place. They try and state that their experiment succeeded, and that these changes will put the country's future at risk.
Yet nothing could be further from the truth. Such views display an ignorance of comparative countries and of alternative economic policies that could only come from squadrons of ill-educated BA (politics) students without a clue as to the real world's economic and social policy issues. It is an empirical fact that in the 1984-99 period the Australian economy grew faster than ours, despite a much more highly regulated labour market, significantly higher marginal tax rates and a range of policy interventions and subsidies from central Government and state Governments to industry.
It is another fact that the United States economy is in its longest ever economic expansion, under a president whose first action was to hugely increase top tax rates, and to propose (if unsuccessfully) the socialisation of the medical care system of the United States.
I mention these things to demonstrate that the `TINA' doctrine - `there is no alternative' - is utter crap. There are _always_ alternatives in economic and social policy. The right's crude attempts to dismantle the welfare state here does not bear supporting on practical economic terms, let alone any others - it has led to an undertrained and unproductive labour force, and a populace that often felt itself under siege, a feeling that was at its worst when Shipley cut benefits in 1991.
So the economic `success' of the reforms is at question. The political failure, in their own terms, has been total. Despite the rhetoric, the state in New Zealand is not significantly smaller than it was in 1984. In fact, it is significantly larger in terms of the % of GDP it consumes. Only in 1990-92 was there a serious attempt to reduce the scope of state activity - and that was given up with alacrity as soon as it was understood that it would lead to political suicide. Only the divisions on the left in '93 allowed the Nats to scrape home. Since then we have seen real increases in government spending in every category. So the facts of the matter are that despite the rhetoric, the right hasn't made us any `freer' at all.
Not only that, but the people have consistently rejected the view of `freedom' the right espouses. Labour was punished in 1990 for division, but also for trying to foist an undesired economic policy on New Zealand. 1993 saw National nearly destroyed and only saved by division on the left. 1996 saw a blatant lie by NZ First allow National to hang on to power despite what the electorate wanted. This demonstrates that the people have never accepted the welfare cutting agenda of the right, and that the conception of freedom that most New Zealanders adhere to is somewhat more sophisticated than a Neanderthal `low tax is good' doctrine.
The challenge for the new Government, of course, in this record of the economic and political failure of the neo-liberal reform programme, is to put something robust in its place. We need an ideological framework rooted in New Zealand society and responsive to the needs and wants of all our people. And we need economic, environmental and social policies that work together to achieve our goals of a prosperous, fair and united New Zealand. Underpinning it has to be an understanding that for most of us, `freedom' means opportunity more than it means freedom from constraint in the form of taxation. And that remains, as it always has been, the message of socialism.
Jordan Carter Editor, YL Vice President
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A response to last week's column.
Got this feedback from a reader last week. It becomes even more relevant with the bizarre and hilarious Young Nats newsletter discussed above. Read on!
>Delivered-To: carters@c.pop.ihug.co.nz >Date: Tue, 25
Jan 2000 14:51:05 +0800 >From: Keith Ng
-- Rebels misfire again! “Prebs Rebs -
following Mad Dog" - Young Labour "After their election loss, the
entire right is in disarray. The Rebels seem to be
following this trend. Instead of putting forward their own
views, they are merely attacking me personally - much the
same as the Young Nats tried to do some weeks ago. "For
Clint Heine's information (President of the Rebels), it is
he and not me who is out of touch with young people today.
Heine's dream society is one where poor people are left to
waste away on their own, where the environment is at the
mercy of anyone who wants to abuse it, and where opportunity
is only there for those who can afford to buy it. "Young
people don't follow that view. Most of us actually care
about our country and our society. Socialism is the
ideological framework which distills that instinctive caring
for others into a coherent political programme," continued
Jordan Carter. "While most shy away from the word these
days, the truth of the matter is that the only alternative
to the new right reforms the world is turning its back on is
democratic socialism. Parties like Labour are enjoying
electoral success around the world, with the support of
young people. Economic success in today's changing world
depends on everyone having access to health and education -
a core socialist ideal, and something Clint Heine's party
opposes. "Far from me living in the past," concluded
Jordan Carter, "it's Clint Heine who wants to go back to the
Victorian age. He's free to do so - but he's not got young
people behind him." ENDS
"It seems that the
Prebbles' Rebels are following in the footsteps of their
mentor when it comes to personalised attacks on their
opponents," Jordan Carter, Vice President of Young Labour
commented this afternoon.