freediver wrote on Sep 25
th, 2011 at 12:21pm:
This is my main criticism of the 'mindless partisan chearleader' mentality, and my reason for starting a seoparate board for partisan issues. A party can afford a certain level of hypocrisy in it's policies, and to change policies over time in a way that does not necessarily make sense, because they inevitably represent the opinions of many people. For a person to do the same does not makle sense. I find it hard to understand how someone could be so devoted to a political party despite this.
A good example is climate change policy. The Greens were the second party I know of to support a carbon tax. Abbott has spoken out in support of a carbon tax as the cheapest way to reduce emissions. Turnbull gave the idea guarded approval also. The only person flatly rejecting the idea going into the last elecetion is Gillard, yet here we are a short time later with Gillard promoting a carbon tax and Abbott decrying it as the end of the world. How could anyone take a genuine stand on the issue while still backing one of the major parties?
In my opinion, people become party chearleaders to avoid having to think for themselves. They get an idea in their head that one of the parties stands for something, then spend the rest of the time ignoring and excusing all the policies that go against that.
Well in context, Abbott said a carbon tax was the cheapest OF two choices, an ETS or a Carbon Price...
Neither are actually THE cheapest way to reduce emissions.......Tax breaks for voluntary reductions and support (financial or tax incentives) for starting up green energy companies would both be cheaper....
And both systems are from ulterior motives.
The Carbon Tax is designed more to return the Government to surplus by 2013/14 and won't do very much to either reduce emissions or lower/stabilse world temperatures.
And the whole cap and trade/ETS system is a 'feel good' device so that countries or companies can give the appearance of doing something, without actually doing anything...