bogarde73 wrote on Feb 27
th, 2016 at 12:20pm:
It underlies everything you say, particularly in international matters.
Maybe you’re right. I do think the future is regional rather than.national. In economic terms, it already is.
But in.policy terms, I’m not a fan of the sort of collectivist socialist policies espoused by some unions and those on the hard left. I’m in a union, and I disagree with most of their ideas. I wouldn’t strike or maintain solidarity with something I didn’t believe in, which is a definite impulse within the ALP. It’s how they managed to keep together
Personally, I’m not a fan of crowds. The collectivist political model is very industrial. It’s how you work a production line. It doesn’t work in the current social and political climate. We’ve moved on. Ideas have to move too.
Clamping down on free trade and migration is a collectivist tendency. This was, after all, the policy of the ALP from 1901 to the 1960s.The policy was based on labour protection. It was scrapped due to economic growth and the need for higher population. Restrictions on trade were scrapped when we saw how much better those Japanese cars and appliances were. Well, that’s shorthand of a number of competing policies, events and global economic paradigm shifts.
My belief in regional governance is about going with the economy, not against it. People trade and migrate more now than at any other time in history. You don’t manage this by banning it - this only causes war.Banning free trade caused WWI, WWII and the Cold War. Banning migration caused tens of millions of refugees to be murdered, put in gulags, or live in stateless limbos.
When these problems have been put to you in the past, Bogie, you said you didn’t care. States need to be able to erect strong borders, ban trade and migration, and arm themselves for war. This doesn’t underlie your posts, you state this.
But underlying this view is an amnesia about the entire 20th century. Those who’ve read or know something of war, don’t want it. Those who’ve read or experienced economic recession, don’t want to go there. You don’t want to lose your savings in inflation, you don’t want to lose your job and have a 50% unemployment rate. You don’t want to lose your house and become homeless. The 1890s recessions, the Great Depression, the OPEC oil shocks, the 1980s Latin American oans crisis, the breakup of the former Soviet Union, the Asian Financial Crisis, the GFC - these crises caused massive poverty, political turmoil and, yes, war.
Australia, more than most countries, is subject to foreign trade and capital. Most economic activity in Australia comes from multinational corporations. We massively rely on the global economy. We always have.
This isn’t collectivism, it’s common sense. Australia is not a closed shop. I support a similar stance in Europe, but for a different reason: an economically integrated Europe will prevent the 20th century history of bloodshed repeating.
This isn’t some collectivist globalist conspiracy, it’s the dominant economic theory from Maynard Keynes on. More trade and financial stability, less war, less povety, less inflation and liebensrsum.
Your alternative, Bogie, is not somewhere any sane person would want to go.