Fixated Units on Nostr: One of those rare moments of clarity - thank you npub1sczm8…5zkms for codifying it ...
One of those rare moments of clarity - thank you npub1sczm86p5y39vtdf4lz5q0ev2zranhs8hz3rm4e7rqe4s8jse968qq5zkms (npub1scz…zkms) for codifying it
Labor are terrified. Of everything - losing govt of course - but from that extends multitude political sins
(I'm aware they're busily 'getting shit done', industrial relations reform first and foremost)
But they have zero public presence for that agenda. There's no communicated vision, no singular idea of what their govt represents. Nothing *radical*
The public expects a Labor govt to go hard on assistance, especially when it's demonstrably most needed. And Labor has no message on that front
'We're safe.' 'Nothing spooky here.' 'Don't you worry'
And yet the electorate is also terrified, watching simple things like the price of everything compound
The public rightly expect to be lead through such a crises, and yet ... 'we're safe' is not a message that conveys any form of confidence. Business as usual is the fucking opposite #auspol
Labor are terrified. Of everything - losing govt of course - but from that extends multitude political sins
(I'm aware they're busily 'getting shit done', industrial relations reform first and foremost)
But they have zero public presence for that agenda. There's no communicated vision, no singular idea of what their govt represents. Nothing *radical*
The public expects a Labor govt to go hard on assistance, especially when it's demonstrably most needed. And Labor has no message on that front
'We're safe.' 'Nothing spooky here.' 'Don't you worry'
And yet the electorate is also terrified, watching simple things like the price of everything compound
The public rightly expect to be lead through such a crises, and yet ... 'we're safe' is not a message that conveys any form of confidence. Business as usual is the fucking opposite #auspol