Opinion:
The Greens have gone neoliberal
RACHEL
STEWART
This was the campaign slogan that made me realise the direction the Greens were taking
14
September, 2015
To
my chagrin I've discovered that there are still people who don't
appear to have a handle on what the word 'neoliberalism' actually
means.
Recently
I tweeted my disgust at the Greens new climate change policy by
accusing them of being the 'N' word.
Of
course, the Green faithful wouldn't have a bar of it. They demanded I
explain how their beloved party was exhibiting such behaviour.
Modern
economic neoliberalism has recurring themes. These include an
unshakeable belief in the power of the market, deregulation, trade
liberalisation, starving social services of funding, blaming the poor
for their situation in life, and the privatisation of public wealth
into the hands of private interests.
Sure,
the Greens replacing the ineffective Emissions Trading Scheme with a
carbon tax on industry polluters is a reasonable stance.
What
isn't reasonable though is the five-year grace period they would give
farmers before having to comply. Farmers are also exempt from the
current ETS.
Some
of us out here in reality land would call that the 'S' word. A
subsidy. You know, like how ratepayers pick up the tab for dairying's
impact on rivers and taxpayers stump up for the Irrigation
Acceleration Fund - whose sole purpose is to increase farming
intensification.
Who
profits from all of that? Private interests.
Yes
folks, that's neoliberalism.
Our
National Government is the textbook example of pure, unfettered
neoliberalism in action.
They
espouse the free market at every turn. They tell us the "invisible
hand" will provide everything needed for utopia. Except when
there are, you know, exceptions.
How
about when Rio Tinto needed taxpayer dosh to keep it in the country.
Or
when Warner Bros needed that $191 million Government sweetener for
The Hobbit to be made here. Oh yes, and the little matter of
instantly changing our labour laws to accommodate them? No worries.
Or
the Saudi sheep bribe?
Those
are more examples of that popular practice of transferring public
wealth into private hands.
Deregulation's
quite popular too. Anything to make the wheels of industry turn
easier.
Health
and Safety laws have become generally watered down – or virtually
non-existent for big earners like farmers. Only worm farmers need
seriously worry.
The
Resource Management Act reforms are still firmly in the pipeline and
are designed to further erode environmental outcomes. They will
ensure polluting is easier for big business, and the public will
continue to pick up the tab.
Neoliberalism
historically enjoys overt patriotism. Anything to keep the masses
tribal. A new flag is the ideal opportunity to enshrine a corporate
logo as a national ensign. There could even be big money in it
according to the Prime Minister. Billions maybe!
Rugby
and patriotism go together like guns and apple pie. Our nation's
fixation with the game is the supreme scenario for the neolibs. Why
else name the team at Parliament?
Another
thing that neoliberalism does very well is it teaches the masses to
hate the poor, or downtrodden. Refugees for example. Many New
Zealanders do care, but their voices are effectively drowned out by
the overwhelming disdain of those who do not.
The
yet-to-be signed Trans Pacific Partnership is the ultimate advert for
neoliberal trade. Sign away your sovereignty, be prepared to be sued
by tobacco companies or oil giants if you change the "rules"
on them, and hold your nose. We're jumping in.
Because
that's what neoliberalism does so well. It takes heinous, amoral,
unethical acts and turns them into "opportunities" and
"growth" while consistently implying trickle-down. Yet, in
reality, it's gush-up.
Essentially
it's a legitimised system of outright greed. The market is God, even
if the market fails – which it does with monotonous regularity. The
sharemarket's just a giant casino. We all know that, but choose to
ignore it.
Capitalism
is at huge odds with climate change. Indeed, it won't let it get in
the way of profit-making.
President
Obama offered up an amusing – if it wasn't so sad – moment of
neoliberal clarity the other day.
After
making belated speeches and proclamations about the reality of
climate change, invoking the usual "grandchildren's
grandchildren" lines, he quickly signed off on Shell drilling
for oil in the Arctic.
He
then immediately went on a three-day tour in Alaska - which included
a hike across a shrinking glacier and visits to coastal communities
affected by sea-level rise and erosion.
Beyond
ironic.
And
that's why the Greens have so disappointed me with their talk of a
five-year exemption for farmers – our biggest industry contributors
to climate change - from a carbon tax.
While
I don't believe they'll be in a position anytime soon to actually
implement the policy, it speaks volumes about their direction and
openness towards the 'N' word.
While
they're dicking around trying to induce farmers to join the Green
Party – and we all know that'll never happen - the glaciers are
literally melting.
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