Kat
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Socialism IS the answer.
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Swann's upcoming budget will, one way or the other, decide the fate of the unemployed for at least the next three years, and quite probably longer.
If Gillard/Swann do not bite the bullet and grant the vital $50/week raise in the pittance they insultingly call 'the dole' in this budget, then it won't happen until we have another (and hopefully much better than this one) Labor government in power. We're talking at least three years here, and possibly six. The unemployed, frankly, cannot go for that long without the increase which, by any measure of fairness, decency and equality, should have been granted at the same time as the pensioners received theirs.
I believe, however, that there's no chance. All we hear is cuts to this, cuts to that, black hole, belt-tightening, and of course, from both sides the stupid calls of 'SURPLUS, SURPLUS, SURPLUS!'. Only an idiot would be chasing a surplus in the current economic climate, and only bigger idiots would be calling for one. Be that as it may, it doesn't take an astronomical telescope to see that the unemployed would be the first to get it in the neck.
She could, of course, reason that Abbott will never grant the increase, and so, knowing that her chances of another term are somewhere between very slim and non-existent, grant it out of spite towards Abbott. But I wouldn't hold my breath on that one, I think she's still delusional enough to think she'll win.
The conservative Liberal Party have always despised the unemployed, and were responsible for creating and reinforcing the myth of the 'dole bludger' prior to that well-known constitutional shambles known as 'The Dismissal'. Liberal policy since Fraser, and reinforced and exacerbated by Howard and now Abbott, has always been to vilify, denigrate and discriminate against the unemployed. They designed and created 'Work for the Dole' for that very reason (scrapping an effective Keating work/training scheme, which worked well and was achieving results, but with a fair 'wage' for participants, decent training, and the good chance of a job on completion).
So, with that history, any increase from Abbott would be out of the question, but one can almost guarantee that any remaining carrots will be thrown away, and a bigger stick purchased. This despite the fact that there are only jobs available for around 10% of job-seekers at any one time. The Liberals can't seem to be able to move away from their belief that the remaining 90% are bludgers who left school at 14 and haven't worked since. It's not only untrue, but it's bloody insulting as well.
Punishing those out of work, whether by pointless make-work schemes like WfD or by a refusal bordering on Sadism to grant the unemployed a reasonable, fairly-indexed rate of payment won't help them to get work, only make it harder. This out-dated mind-set that 'the dole is short-term only, not a lifestyle' needs to be gotten rid of as well. It's fine (and true) when there's work available everywhere. But we all know that this is no longer the case, nor has it been for some time. So let's ditch the 'lifestyle' rhetoric once and for all.
Anyway, Tuesday night is crunch-time.
Will they get a fair raise? Or will they be spat upon and kicked in the face once again?
My money (and yes, it IS mine) is on the latter.
Kat.
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