Fred Bailey

Fremantle, Western Australia, AUSTRALIA


Joined April 24th 2008

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Tom Craven

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Parliament Needs Urgent Tweaking

May 11th 2008 09:39
Parliament is supposed to be the start and end of society, but it is riddled with errors and needs urgent reform.

Parliament is supposed be made up of parliamentarians who represent their individual communities, this role has changed so much over time that MP’s (especially in Federal Parliament) rarely represent their local community. Individual MP’s usually act to represent their party and its policy. Obviously acting when within the bounds of party policy MP’s are restricted to what they can do for their local areas. MP’s become subordinate to party discipline, but this subordination also extends to the executives power over MPs. Due to the executive’s power and party alliances, parliament has in some ways become little more than a rubber stamp for the public record which leaves the real governance to the executive.

Anthony Smith who authored ‘Parliament Degraded’ states that ‘all aspects of the institution are decaying’, he refers explicitly to the legislative and debating functions, question time, the presiding officers, accountability as well as language and behavior. He argues that Parliament is nothing more than a theatrical society which gives the impression that governance is actually taking place but in actual fact the only governance is that of the Cabinet behind close doors.

Parliament’s decline is also demonstrated by the actual parliamentarians themselves. Roughly 75% of parliamentarians are men, but only 50% of the population are men. Men are over represented by 25% and women under represented by 25%, it should be noted however that parliament since its beginning has never had a fair quota of men and women. So this can not be a real argument for the decline of parliament rather a flaw of parliament that has never been repaired. Perhaps a more convincing argument for the decline of parliament is instead how parliamentarians are selected. Often parties will put second rate candidates up for election just because they are popular or have a name (Peter Garret)or have beaten other opponents through branch stacking in pre-selection. A modern example of poor selection of candidate is that of Alex Hawke. Alex Hawke is the former president of the Young Liberals who some say invited ‘friends’ into Alan Cadman’s seat of Mitchell in NSW with the specific purpose of ousting him. Alan Cadman has been the sitting member since 1974 but was ousted out by Hawke in 2007 in what can only be described as a mean case of ‘branch stacking’. Cadman was popular within his electorate and in most people’s opinions had done a good job, Hawke has just moved to electorate and branch stacked his way to the top, kicking out a sitting MP of over 30 years. These dirty tactics and poor selection of candidate for parliament, are a convincing argument for its decline.

The Revival of Parliament has been spoken about in recent times, many people state that the revival of the Senate Committee’s are proof of parliament’s revival as well as the prevalence of minor parties holding the balance of power. Another argument is the new founded popularity of Question Time and debate. All though these arguments appear convincing, in reality they are far less so. Although minor parties occasionally do hold the balance of power their effects on legislation are at best minimal, John Cain (premier of Victorian in late 80s and early 90s) proved that ‘selective proclamation’ was an effective way of getting around minor parties, this technique could be used in Federal Parliament quite easily, the people’s mandate is another way of discounting minor parties. The Senate power is often overstated despite it sometimes being seen as the ‘2nd coming of Parliament, A,Smith’. Earlier this year with WorkChoices the Senate proved that it will always bow to the Lower House no matter what. Committee’s in the Senate have improved but its recommendations are not always acted upon, the Republic and New Zealand Committee Reports are proof of this. Finally Question time may look impressive but as Smith points out its ineffective and demonstrates the lack of behavior and respect in parliament which further leads to its decline.

Sometimes its seems unpopular to support the ‘Decline Of Parliament’ thesis but all facts support this belief. The Revival Of Parliament is something that we would all like to believe in, but the decline in the lower house far outweighs the ‘revival’ in the upper house (Also let us not forget that the Senate also has party loyalty problems and its real role as a ‘States House’ was destroyed long ago, the supposed revival of the Senate will never justify its destruction as the ‘States House’). Reform is needed to counter the decline but party loyalty and constitutional change measures will always halt this. Parliaments role will always be a changing one, but in this case it has changed for the worse.

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The Hidden Beauty of Britannia

May 5th 2008 13:32


God Save the Queen,
The fascist regime
Let her preach the age old fable of one mans superiority,
For to bow before Britannia
Is to lay oneself before tyranny, for the very foundations of English majesty are rancid with our dear friend autocracy.

The royalists saw it fit that they rule the new world,
And thus they the seized the lands from beneath the native feet
They stripped the lands bare; the scars can bee seen across our fair land.

And then the time came to call forth the troops
But being the son of an empire only carries one so far
She sent them forth with disdain,
To die before foreign arms.

For Britannia is the eternal land of the white plutocracy,
A land of privilege and birth right.
Lost in their story of plight....
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As the AFL season rages on with Geelong and the fall of West Coast the big news, few of us are aware that an equally important competition is also going on, that of the WAFL.

In years gone the WAFL was bigger then Ben Hurr and it provided WA fans with more then its fair share of football action. Many footy greats played their best years in the WAFL; examples include Polly Farmer, Brian Peake and George Doig. Well what has changed? WA is the still producing awesome footballers, WA is still a prominent football state but WA has changed, and changed for the worst.

Many people remember the WAFL and SANFL glory days; the days where the WAFL grand finals would attract 70,000 plus screaming fans, in fact the 1970 Grand Final had the biggest WAFL crowd ever 77,000. But yet here we are 28 years later and only 20,000 people could be bothered to show up to the 2006 WAFL grand final. Where have all the crowds gone? Well the crowds have been lost, in a sea of flashy commercialism and franchises. In WA we have two, 1 is markedly worse then the other and those 2 franchises will wear the shame of destroying WA footy for ever.

Prior to 1986 the WAFL was doing great, many people will infact tell you the WAFL was doing poorly and all clubs were in financial difficulties. Well nothing could be further from the truth. Did you know the WAFL actually produced more money per club in its league then the powerful VFL did in 1986? The fact that crowd attendances were at an all time high also proves my point. Everything was hunky dory, everything was simply great. We had real teams: teams like East Fremantle with real history and tradition dating back 150 years and 29 premierships including 2 Australia Cups where East Fremantle defeated the best of the VFL and the SANFL.


So if the WAFL was so good, why did it fall so quickly? This question is a common one and can be answered quite easily. The VFL happened to be the first league to nationalize, had the WAFL nationalised first as opposed to the VFL then perhaps it would be Collingwood not Swan Districts in financial difficulties.

The VFL decided in 1986 that it would introduce a Western Australian franchise into the VFL. The key fact here is that the Victorians entered the Eagles not the WAFL that proves that West Coast is about as West Australian as the Eifel Tower is Nigerian.

At first people were slow to take to the West Coast franchise, however after some time and some cash injections from over east Western Australians succumbed to the commercial might of the East Coast Eagles business machine, they fell for its shamanistic charm and with the fall of the supporters came the fall of 150 years of tradition and history.

Football history is often quoted in the office and the school yard. Most people will know who the greatest goal kicker in AFL history is and who the best player in the league is at any one moment. In fact if

you were to ask a normal Western Australian who the greatest goal kicker was in footy history they would most likely reply quickly ‘Tony Lockett’ or ‘Gary Ablett’. By doing so they usurp 150 years of football history they concede that no player of any importance played in the WAFL, they also admit that as far as their concerned that 150 years did not happen. They admit that WA has and always will be bad at football.

Is this what we want? A state that does not even admit football was played here prior to the VFL ‘rescued’ us in 1987? Of course not but our youngsters and not the only ones corrupted by the AFL. Even our Western Australian Hall of Fame which is set up to acknowledge Western Australian football players has collapsed. There are 30 Western Australian players in the Hall of Fame of which exactly 12 played for West Coast. So in 150 years of Western Australian football, 40% of the best players happened to play in the last 23 years. The chances of that happening are 5-1. Of course a person with common sense knows it didn’t happen. What we do know however is that Western Australian Football Commission has looked past 127 years of football and focused on the last 23. Those 127 years need to be recognised.

We as the Western Australian public have forgotten our own history, even our own paper ‘The West Australian’ only listed 1 WAFL moment in its top 10 of football history in WA. According to the paper in the past 20 years we are fortunate enough to have witnessed 90% of great WA football moments; we seem to have forgotten that football did occur prior to 1986.

Western Australia is a great state, WA is great at most activities its gives ago. Its especially great at football as proved by its long diverse history, supporting West Coast is not the way to go about supporting Western Australia. Supporting Western Australia is Western Australians going to their own competition instead of a Victorian one. We have lost everything and gained nothing.
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The Barracking Mentality

April 30th 2008 09:27
Australian Yobbo’s draping themselves in Australian flags, bogans with stickers of the flag on the back of their Holden ute and hoons wearing shirts with slogans like ‘if you don’t like it get out’ or ‘we grew here, you flew here’. Please someone tell me, what is happening to our country?

It’s bad enough with sport; we as ordinary Australians are constantly subjected to the ‘barracking mentality’ of Australian culture. Sporting commentators and normal Australian’s alike constantly yap on about how sport is such an integral part of our culture and why sport shows the real Aussie spirit. Since when did kicking some leather with air in it become an important celebration of culture? This is what is happening, to our country. We had a culture once, glance back to Federation or even just after WW2, an emerging culture of youth and new Australianism came into existence. We still had pride in our country, more so than today, but we did not behave like we do today. Today we support our country in the same way we support a sporting club, this a dangerous mentality to have. Our country is not a sporting team, it is a country and it should be treated with some kind of reverence


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Commentators in this country of late have been championing the card of Kevin Rudd: The Man With No Substance. They argue that he is as plastic as the bumper stickers that bear his name and as shallow as Julie Bishop’s supporters, apparently he has no policy just a smile and some quiff gibberish about working families. People who have this opinion no doubt desire a return to the ‘Glory Day’s, the return to Howard; a man so out of touch he lost his own seat being only one of two PM’s in over a hundred years to do so.

In Howard’s first term as PM the only notable policy he introduced was gun laws (which was entirely circumstantial), partly selling Telstra (the fledging phone company) and trying to destroy Industrial Relations. None of these were important election promises, since Rudd has been in office for just under 200 days he has dismantled the idiotic WorkChoices, increased funding to non-government schools, signed Kyoto, said ‘Sorry’, started the process for a Republic, increased relationships with China and removed Troops from Iraq.Sounds like a lot, in fact more than Howard in a shorter time period. Rudd has delivered on his promises, his made the country more Labor which is what he intended and it’s what the Australian public voted for


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Israel: A Threatened Species

April 26th 2008 12:39
In this country we get far too much anti-zionism, we get this ignorant belief that the Israeli's are the bad guys who are attacking the innocent Palestinians. Recently there has been discussion about Israel's refusal to sign a short period truce with Hamas, let us remember that Hamas is a hardline Islamist Terrorist group, whose name appears on all most every Terrorist list in the world. Why would an nation negotiate with terrorists like Hamas, it would be like the USA signing a treaty with Al Qaeda, what a ridiculous sentiment.

Although we all sympathize with the Palestinians let us not forget that in 1948 we had a 2 state solution, one was Jewish the other Islamic, the Islamic state being the forerunner of Palestine and the Jewish state being Israel. The Islamic nation along with other Islamic nations declared war and publicly stated that 'Israel would be wiped off the face of the Earth', these nations invaded Israel but lost despite greatly outnumbering Israel. Again in 1967 Palestine and its allies attacked Israel on a Jewish national holiday, the equivalent of Ramadan, once again Israel defeated the Muslim nations


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Our country is made up of six states, the only thing that links a Western Australian and and a Tasmanian is the fact that they live in the same country. There is no other connection, they are Western Australian and Tasmanian first, and Australian second. We as a nation should never support attempts to increase the eastern states domination over the smaller states, we as a collective group are far too different and federalism works far too well to abandon. Regional governments or councils would divide Australia from anywhere between 50 and 20 regional councils. This would leave all important areas of governance to the Commonwealth. This would spell the end for Australia as we know it.

It a popular argument by the wannabe destroyers of federalism that the states are a needless tier of government. But did you know that States spend around 70% of the expenditure of the government while the Commonwealth spends around 20%, the states provide the majority of the services that we use. Outsourcing these to Canberra (who have no experience) with these areas would be devastating for all concerned


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The Australian Republic 2008

April 24th 2008 05:33

In 1788 white Australia is founded, a convict colony of Britain, a stain on its empire. 220 years later we stand with a British head of state, a British symbol of oppression marks our flag. Our Parliament is sovereign, our cricket team is the best in the world and our trade with Britain is at an all time low.

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With the giant 'Rudd Circle Jerk' also known as '2020' the issue of an Australian Bill Of Rights has been raised once again. The usual constitutional minimalists are up against the lunatics from the constitutional reform side who are to incompetent to understand the basic dangers of a bill of rights. The problem with a bill of rights is that to ordinary citizens it sounds good, what’s so bad about legislating on your basic rights? Spark some deeper thought about the issue here separates the morons from the men.

We have the best constitution in the world, no one comes near us. Rightly or wrongly entrenched within this constitution and common law principles surrounding it we have basic human rights already guaranteed. These bindings on humans rights are unbreakable


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Recent Comments

Comment by Tom Craven
on Brisbane V Geelong Game Preview

April 30th 2008 13:31
how is beating sydney by 42 points a close win?
2ndly the game against freo was only close because sandilands played the game of his life, if we had had ottens and egan they never would have got a sniff.

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