There
was an election in Australia the other week.
I
have no understanding of Australian politics, so I read up on the subject.
Their
Liberal Party is conservative. The National Party, a smaller party, joined with
the Liberal Party to form the Coalition, a group large enough to form a
government.
Australia
has many parties, and they can make deals and shift votes to gain power and
influence decisions. Not like our two-party do or die system.
The
Australian Labor party (ALP) is left-centrist. ALP is the party that supports
unions and other progressive types and consider themselves social democrats.
The
Coalition and ALP were the two main contenders in the recent election. The ALP
was expected to win – all the polls said they would – and gain control of the
government and take Australia in a more progressive direction.
They
did not win.
My
Australian goddaughter’s Facebook page reflected her and her friends’ shock and
dismay: “Devastating.” “Oh no!” “When I woke up and heard the results, I was so
depressed.”
Sound
familiar?
So
– the government of Australia is firmly in the hands of the conservative
Coalition for another few years. Their leader, Scott Morrison, attributes their
win to the “Quiet Australian.”
He
describes Quiet Australians: “They have their dreams, they have their
aspirations, to get a job, to get an apprenticeship, to start a business, to
meet someone amazing, to start a family, to buy a home, to work hard and
provide the best you can for your kids, to save for your retirement.”
My
goddaughter comments: “I want all this PLUS action on climate change,
humanitarian treatment of refugees, etc., etc. So does that make me a ‘loud’
Australian? A ‘quiet’ Australian is basically someone who looks toward their
own self interest and shuts up about equal rights, climate change, the
environment, etc.?”
At
least one analyst believed the Coalition got votes with their fear-mongering
ads saying that Bill Shorten, leader of the Australian Labor Party, would tax
people’s cars, retirement, and small businesses, and would institute a death
tax, and that the last time ALP was in power “they let in 50,000 illegal
immigrants and cost taxpayers billions of dollars.”
Again
– familiar?
When
I first read the pained reactions of some Australians to the outcome of the
election, I thought some words of sympathy might be in order from a country
that could feel their pain.
I
posted on my goddaughter’s Facebook page:
“Obviously,
I’m an Amurrican and don’t understand the ins and outs of your politics – but
you sound a little like we did when DT was elected. My deepest condolences.
“Our
situation, as you may know, goes from bad to worse, to even worse, day by day.
“My
advice, for what it’s worth, is to make sure you have a peaceful place, inside
or outside of yourself, and go there often. Don’t let the bastards grind you
down.
“Remember
to be joyful, and love life – what else are we fighting for? A future for our
children and grandchildren, yes. But find what’s worth loving in life right
now.
“It
is too easy to become discouraged by the blind greed, stupidity, and cruelty of
politicians. Don’t give them the satisfaction. Run for office. Grow flowers.
Practice your art.”
After
I wrote that I looked at it and thought, hm, I ought to copy that and print it
up to look at when the melancholy and grief of this hard, sad old world get me
down.
The
Germans have a word for the melancholy and grief of this hard, sad old world: Weltschmerz.
Look,
we do not live in a war zone being showered with phosphorous bombs by our own
country’s leader, as some people do at present. Many of us benefit from living
in the richest country in the world. I certainly do.
However,
we do have homeless and starving and addicted and indigent people. We do have
children in concentration camps. We do have white guys willing to go to any
length to control, torture, and kill the women and people of color they fear
and hate: Yeah, let’s imprison women for having miscarriages. Let’s hire ICE
agents who sexually abuse the children in their custody. Let’s not give a rat’s
behind about missing and murdered indigenous women. Let’s not have sensible gun
regulation, because once you are born, your life is worthless.
I
try not to allow what I know of this world to keep me from living.
I
pray, and sing, and write, and laugh, every day, from my heart, and my belly,
and my soul.
That
is my resistance to the cognitive dissonance of life in America and the trend
toward similar governments around the world these days; to the Weltschmerz.
It
ain’t much, but it’s all I’ve got.
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