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  • Literature

  • In Our Time

    By Michael Reid

    1st July 1992

    A poetic, cynical analysis of politics, unfortunately timeless….

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    In Our Time


    Old people asleep under yesterday's news
    A freezing denial of Capital views
    Wrapped from the winter in hopeless desertion
    While oil heaters soothe our leader inertia
    The Ministers gag until Parliament stands
    No solvent like recess for washing the hands.

    Carousel fever, polepidemic
    Power the plague, and glory symptonic
    Good men and true have succumbed to the curse
    Humanity's syphillis dressed as nurse
    More power prescribed as cure for the ill 
    Sinecure sanctity, smoothest of pills.

    Ignorant rhetoric will always appease
    A ravenous thirst for mass marketing sleaze
    Confidence, colour and loads of compassion
    Offering silk from pork auricle rations 
    Bidding for destiny's role of Messiah 
    A flourishing specie, Earnest Pariah.

    Barely beneath this posturing swagger
    Is hidden a sheathed amorphous dagger
    Policies hacked from pre-polling-booth crass
    Poverty, pestilence, pain for the mass 
    Tear-streaked appeals or national fervour 
    Fail to dissuade the starving from murder.

    Enter the honest man seeking endorsement
    Shouting the truth from podium and pavement
    But truth lacks conviction and wreaks of decline
    So parasites push for the cosy sublime
    Exit the honest man broken and bloody
    Onward the bureaucrat smiling and ruddy.

     

    Michael Reid
    July 1992

     

    © Michael Geoffrey Reid 1992, all rights reserved

     

  • Inner Sanctum

    By Michael Reid

    1st May 1992

    A pre-election musing.

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    Inner Sanctum
     

    As Autumn recalls the Capital's beauty

    (Wasted foliage dying in style)

    Government Ministers head to their duty

    To gather a case of denial

     

    The Cabinet meets in the plush furnished room

    Having pranced for reporters outside

    They're all looking splendid in mid-career bloom

    Where their egos and ethics collide

     

    "Agenda" begins the paper before them

    Yet below it the page is quite bare

    Members methodically ponder this portent

    With well practised omniscient stares

     

    The P.M. appears looking cool and robust

    His suit of the best foreign label

    Then speaks in a manner designed to disgust

    The roughest of men at the table

     

    "Some backbencher mentioned the dole queues to me

    And the Balance of Payments, and stress

    Well let me explain so we all can agree

    The real issue which we must address

     

    "There's only one cause in Australia today

    That is truly worth fighting about

    And that's whether we'll still be drawing our pay

    When the '93 voters are out

     

    "Real issues and cold facts are not to be seen

    From this moment and until the poll

    The object of course is a giant smokescreen

    To make Hewson and Fightback! look droll

     

    "This week we shall force a debate on the flag

    And next week we'll sing a new anthem

    And if any democrat vetos a gag

    We'll hold his fat pension for ransom

     

    "We're the battler's friend and the nation's elite

    And we care for our comrades, amen

    But how can we help if we're out on the street

    Where we'd be useless scum-bags like them

     

    "We must keep our efforts directed and clear

    Away from these pointless distractions

    And if any Member should cry like a steer

    I'll castrate his whole bloody faction

     

    "Well Gentlemen let us return to our task

    To carry us through the election

    And if we survive you might venture to ask

    Was Keating the new resurrection.

     

     

    Michael Reid

    May 1992

     

     

    © Michael Geoffrey Reid 1992, all rights reserved

     

     

  • Politics

  • AUSTRALIAʼS CORE VA..

    By Michael Reid

    19th December 2024

    A White Paper - Australia’s Core Values

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    WHITE PAPER - AUSTRALIAʼS CORE VALUES

    Equality for All - Rights to education, health, worship
    The individual right to choose career, partner, course of study
    Commitment to respect and protect Citizens
    Commitment to a democratic society
    Belief in a free enterprise, laissez faire economy
    Commitment to the rule of law and undertaking to act lawfully
    Acknowledgement of marriage as two adult people of any gender in a relationship of
    equality
    Responsibility not to incite hatred or violence
    Belief in society providing care for the Genuinely Disadvantaged
    Belief in the direct correlation between contribution and entitlements, for all but the
    Genuinely Disadvantaged
    Acknowledgment of both rights and responsibilities
    Employers and employees to demonstrate mutual care
    Rejection of any individual, organisation or religion which promotes a restriction of the
    rights of Citizens

    CITIZENS AND THE GENUINELY DISADVANTAGED
    Citizenship bestows benefits which are unavailable to non-citizens;
    Citizenship is bestowed at birth;
    Citizenship may be suspended or cancelled;
    Temporary or Probationary Citizenship may be bestowed on refugees and immigrants who
    otherwise meet the requirements of Citizenship;
    A Citizen who is Genuinely Disadvantaged becomes a Protected Citizen, either temporarily
    or permanently depending on the nature of the Disadvantage, subject to otherwise
    meeting the reasonable requirements of Citizenship;
    The Genuinely Disadvantaged may include the young, the elderly, and the physically or
    mentally disabled.

    Rules of Citizenship:
    A Citizen who is convicted of a criminal offence will have their Citizenship suspended;
    A Citizen who is convicted of treason, a major criminal offence, or a series of criminal
    offences, will have their Citizenship revoked;
    A Temporary or Probationary Citizen who is charged with a criminal offence will have their
    Citizenship suspended;
    A Temporary or Probationary Citizen who is convicted of a criminal offence will have their
    Citizenship revoked, and will be repatriated to their country of origin;

    Definition of a Citizen:
    A Citizen is one who seeks to exhibit good character, and consideration for all other
    Citizens; who acknowledges the direct correlation between contribution and entitlements;
    who recognises the need to care for the Genuinely Disadvantaged; who declares and
    practices respect for other Citizens; who respects and honours the rule of law and the
    tenets of justice; who promotes and practices equality amongst genders and races; who
    understand that the role as Citizen exceeds personal religious convictions;

    Declaration of Rights and Responsibilities
    I hereby commit:
    To be a Citizen;
    To honour the Declaration of Rights and Responsibilities;
    To live with honour and decency;
    To contribute positively to society to the best of my ability;
    To the pursuit of justice;
    To the pursuit of peaceful resolution;
    To government elected by the majority of adult Citizens of sound mind;
    To the right of every adult Citizen of sound mind to vote by secret ballot;
    To the right of every adult Citizen of sound mind to worship;
    To equality between all races and genders of Citizens;
    To the elimination of poverty amongst all Citizens;
    To the protection of all Citizens from persecution;
    To the protection of young, weak, sick, infirm, and elderly Citizens;
    To the right of every Citizen to education, health care, employment and physical protection;
    To the right of every Citizen to have freedom of speech without persecution;
    To actively support and welcome the success of all Citizens who commit to and honour
    The Declaration of Rights and Responsibilities.
    The Rights of a Citizen
    The right to reside in the Country
    The right to live freely
    The right to be employed or self employed
    The right to personal choice in the pursuit of career, partner, religion, or course of study
    The right to be protected by a democratic system of government, supported by the
    doctrine of the separation of powers
    The right to participate in the nomination and selection of candidates for members of
    parliament
    The right to vote at public elections and referenda by secret ballot
    The right to receive a public education
    The right to choose, at cost, private education
    The right to receive high quality public medical care
    The right to choose, at cost, private medical care
    The right to live in safety and free of oppression

  • A Liberal on the hus..

    By Michael Reid

    3rd March 2024

    It was a pleasure to meet Justin Derksen at Great Lake Hotel.

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    Justin is doing the rounds in his bid for election in Lyons, presenting his views to the folks of New Norfolk and central Tasmania. We had a brief but interesting discussion on politics, health, education, and his passion to serve his community.

    For those interested in learning more about Justin, you might select this link: https://tas.liberal.org.au/our-team/justin-derksen

     

  • The Next Revolution

    By Michael Reid

    19th December 2022

    A Sensible and Peaceful Revolution in Politics

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    The following is a personal opinion piece from Michael Reid, and does not necessarily represent the opinions of ClubMaster.

     

    Our modern democratic political systems have been structured based on almost ancient principles and assumptions.

    The representation system has been essential in previous centuries, caused by limitations primarily in education and communication.

    By their nature, or more accurately by human nature, the representation system has become bloated, inefficient, and non-representative of the communities they claim to represent.

    I have argued for decades that the Australian political structure is more bloated than most, given these three fat and expensive tiers of government are representing less than 28 million people. 

    As someone with a habit of bloating my own corporate structures in establishing and developing business ventures, it pains me to acknowledge that our current political structure is clearly a nonsense.

    Fast forward to 2022, and we now enjoy, in almost every democratic society of the World, extremely high levels of education, and almost unlimited access to communication. To my great dismay, I have witnessed in recent decades the deliberate deterioration of education, invariably for political gain.

    Now is the time to cease shuffling the deck chairs, and to embrace a fundamental change in the way decisions are made by and on behalf of the citizens.

    Setting aside the risks posed by influence with ignorance, and the dangers posed by knee-jerk responses to social and other media bias, most citizens are genuinely community-minded.

    The majority of the population are across many of the issues, and more than ever before are educated and intelligent.

    Had political representatives remained truly representative of their community, and not been so prone to influence, corruption, and power-focus, the status quo may have been retained.

    Instead, many now acknowledge that it’s time for truly structural reform, for a redefinition of community decision-making. Technology is the vehicle which enables this reform, alongside education and communication.

    Whilst we’re at it, massive political structural reform needs to be accompanied by fundamental reforms of financial, taxation, and expenditure application.

    My fervent wish for the future for Australia includes the following:

    1. The reduction to two tiers of government, with expanded super-councils providing state representation, and with one mayor appointed by all mayors as Premier or Chief Minister in each respective State and Territory;
    2. An increase in the term of governments to fixed four year terms;
    3. The clear delineation between the roles of national and local government;
    4. The establishment of national policies in areas of health, education, domestic security, licensing, national-state laws, defence, infrastructure, natural resource management, and international relations;
    5. A significantly improved national identity, national culture, and definition of the Australian Citizen;
    6. A world-leading Citizen identification and communication system;
    7. The expansion of community decision-making across all aspects from portfolio policy to the priorities of public financial management;
    8. The elimination of taxation returns, income tax, GST and BAS, and FBT, in return for an automatic debits tax (ADT);
    9. The elimination of cash in order to facilitate the above new taxation regime;
    10. The development of a Sovereign Wealth Fund with a view to ultimately eliminating the ADT within this century.

     

    Democracies need to return to a focus on community, and to the value-add proposition. Non-democracies need to focus on becoming democracies.

    Technology enables efficiency; efficiency eliminates waste of financial and other resources; reduced waste results in the redirection of resources, including human resources, into value adding; a direct debits tax and the redirection into adding value will help to eliminate parasite activities at all levels, being individual, commercial, and bureaucratic. A social order will ensure those who deserve protection are afforded protection with dignity.

    At a personal level, I want to become more proud of my country. I want to feel safe, not just from “threats foreign and domestic” (to borrow from others), but also from undue interference foreign and domestic; I want my country to know every person who occupies the country; I want the country’s key assets to be owned by the Citizens of the Country; I want every Good Citizen to be protected and valued, and to be committed to their local, regional and National communities; and I want Australia to encourage and support all other nations to adopt and embrace similar strategies and philosophies.

     

     

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