John Passant

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Gillard's gender pay gap
Evidently Julia Gillard has the interests of working people and retirees at heart.  So I ask her to explain her role as Employment and Workplace Relations Minister and Deputy Prime Minister for almost 3 years in addressing the gender pay gap? Under Labor it actually increased to 18.2%. So apart from platitudes, what will Prime Minister Gillard offer to redress the imbalance and cut the gender pay gap to zero by 2013 if she is re-elected? Or could it be that such a policy would be too costly for her key supporters – business? So she will talk about equal pay for equal work but do nothing.  Add equal pay to the mining tax, climate change. WorkChoices Lite, the Australian Building and Construction Commission and many other examples of Gillard and Labor not being prepared to upset their real masters – the rich and powerful. (0)

The grate debate
I am  looking forward to the grate debate and the victory of the worm over the two grubs. (0)

The worm will win
My prediction is that the worm will win tonight’s debate, not the two grubs. Vote for the worm, not the grubs. (0)

Build a socialist alternative

Labor and the Liberals have the same policies on war, refugees, attacking living standards, cutting public services like schools and hospitals, screwing Universities and doing nothing about climate change. They both run the system for the bosses and their profits. It’s time for a real alternative – a socialist alternative of democracy where production is organised to satisfy human need. The first step in that process is fighting against the attacks of whichever party is managing capitalism for the bosses. Come along to hear John Passant from Socialist Alternative argue the case against capitalism and for socialism and why you should be a socialist on Thursday 22 July at 6 pm in room G 40 Haydon-Allen Building ANU.
(6)

Refugees are welcome here
If a regional processing centre for refugees is such a good idea, why not set it up in Australia? With safeguards for refugees  like community housing rather than locking people up. (0)

The real face of the mining maggots
Remember those nice mining company people who opposed the Resource Super Profits Tax for purely altruistic reasons – the economy, their workforce, mine workers’ jobs and wages? Xstrata workers have gone on strike and set up a five day picket line to win a decent deal from these caring sharing bastards. (0)

Canberra meeting: Onine interview with Sherry Wolf

Canberra Socialist Alternative forthcoming public discussion:
 
Politics and LGBTI rights today: online interview with US activist and author Sherry Wolf
 
Thursday 8 July 6 pm Room G 31 Copland Building ANU 
 
Sherry Wolf is the author of Sexuality and Socialism, an American socialist and Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transsexual and Intersex rights activist. In her book Sherry argues that to see a world free of sexual oppression, it is essential that we get rid of capitalism. It is the politics of looking to the working class that is key to this, and she reminds us that “What humans have constructed, they can tear down”.
 
(0)

Equal pay for all women
Will Julia Gillard be paid 17% less than Kevin Rudd? Equal pay is the right of all women, not just bosses like Gillard. (0)

A sick system
Know how when you are sick you lie in bed on one side and then after a while roll over to the other side? Then after a little while you roll back again? But rolling around from one side to the other doesn’t cure the illness. Politics in Australia is like that. At the moment. (0)

An early election?
The Sydney Morning Herald today shows first preferences for the ALP up 14 percent to 47 percent after the leadership change. The Greens are down 7 percent. On a 2 Party Preferred it would be 55 to the ALP and 45 to the Opposition. On these figures Labor would romp home.  The Gordon Brown effect maybe? Gillard must be tempted to go very soon. Perhaps in August before the footy finals begin? ‘To legitimise my leadership and give us a fresh mandate’ no doubt. (0)

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Is vegetarianism the way to save the planet?

Telling individuals to eat less meat to stop climate change doesn’t challenge an unsustainable and destructive system, writes Camilla Royle in the UK weekly Socialist Worker.

Environmental economist Lord Stern of Brentford has recently argued that in order to stop climate change we should all start eating less meat.

He proposes that the Copenhagen climate conference at the end of this year should introduce measures to increase the price of meat and gradually make meat-eating socially unacceptable.

Stern’s comments will strike a chord with many people. Meat and dairy production uses much more land and water than growing crops does, and the methane emissions from farm animals contribute to global warming.

And people are understandably shocked by the inhumane way meat is produced under capitalism, with chickens and pigs crammed into factory farms in order to produce as much food as possible at the lowest cost.

Vegetarianism is already popular among sections of the environmental movement.

But universal vegetarianism wouldn’t be enough to stop climate change, because it would leave the root causes of climate change intact.

Food production under capitalism, whether meat or not, damages the environment because its sole concern is making profit.

It is also inherently wasteful because production is not planned. Instead food is overproduced as companies compete to sell the most.

By pointing the finger at individual consumers, Stern avoids criticising the multinationals that control our food supply.

Major supermarkets in Britain throw away two million tons of food from their shelves every year – enough to feed 6.3 million people.

They say there are too few staff to go around reducing prices and making sure the food is sold. But these supermarkets are making huge profits – they could create these jobs if they wanted to.

Profit

The drive for profit damages the environment in other ways too.

The rush for biofuels, for example, has meant that land and water that could be used to feed people is instead used to produce fuel for cars and planes.

Measures to “discourage” people from eating meat, such as raising its price, would have a greater impact on working class people, who spend a greater proportion of their income on food than the ruling class.

And the impact of preventing people in the Global South from eating meat would be even more extreme.

Eating a healthy and balanced vegetarian diet may be possible in places where there is access to other sources of protein – for example from soy, nuts and legumes – but for many this is not the case.

For example some environmentalists call for bans on the hunting of “bushmeat”, particularly in central African forests.

But if this was removed from people’s diets altogether it would reduce their protein intake to far below the level recommended by the World Health Organisation to avoid protein deficiency.

Stern’s proposals have been attacked more vigorously by worried meat and farming industry leaders than by ordinary people.

After all, many people are concerned about the environment and are looking for ways to do something to change things.

Inadequate

But if we take what scientists are saying about climate change seriously, simply cutting out meat will be inadequate to avoid catastrophe.

The Centre for Global Food Issues has pointed out that creating five billion vegans – most of the world’s population – might help, but would be impossible as well as undesirable.

Like most solutions proposed by the ruling class, vegetarianism doesn’t challenge the interests of that class, and therefore won’t change things far enough or quickly enough.

Stern points out that attitudes to food and drink have changed dramatically throughout his lifetime and can potentially be changed again.

However, history has shown that ideas about what is “natural” about how we live can very quickly alter when society changes.

A good example is the way that attitudes towards women shifted dramatically after the Russian Revolution in 1917, when women won the vote, access to education and greater freedom.

But these changes weren’t implemented individually or by strict legislation from the top. They came about by collective action involving both men and women.

The focus on personal lifestyle changes implies that we are all equally to blame for climate change and that we have a common interest in stopping it.

It draws attention away from the fact that the richest people in the world have much larger carbon footprints than the poorest and that tackling climate change directly challenges the interests of some of those at the top.

Such ideas could even lead people to side with the rich in blaming people in the Global South for the problem.

In a democratically planned society our relationship to food might change. We may find ourselves eating less meat or producing it in different ways.

However, the way to achieve this kind of society is to challenge the unsustainable capitalist one we live in at the moment.

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