Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Conflicted Clive

AAP: Dave Hunt - file photo
What’s getting up my nose this week? MPs of course.
In particular, Clive Palmer and his parliamentary voting record.

On November 14, 2013 a press release published on Palmer United’s website said Clive Palmer (seen above with a fellow dinosaur)
...would be abstaining from voting in the House of Representatives on the carbon tax repeal legislation to avoid a potential conflict of interest. 
"I'm applying company director standards and stepping out of this debate as there’s currently a potential conflict of interest," Mr Palmer said.
But then gave himself a totally get out of jail free card:
"If this carbon tax issue is still not resolved by the time the Palmer United Party senators-elect take their place in the parliament next July then they’ll deal with it.

"They do not have a conflict of interest." 
No conflict of interest my arse.

His party members were able to vote to repeal the carbon tax on his behalf.

His two senators voted to "personally and directly financially advantage" their party leader, to quote Greens leader Christine Milne.

Meanwhile, others on the internet are arguing that the PUP took the carbon tax repeal as a policy to the election, thus Lazarus, Lambie and Wang had an obligation to their supporters to vote in accordance with their published Policy document. And those senators do not have individual pecuniary interest in the matter, they don’t own mining or energy companies, so no reason not to vote.

So okay, technically it’s within the rules of our parliament that, as Crikey points out
"never envisaged a situation where a wealthy individual would use that wealth to create a party in his own name and propel others into the Senate." 
But to get to today's up the nose subject, Palmer’s voting record.

According to an ABC report, he has only voted 19 times out of 202. And “13 related to axing the carbon and mining taxes or associated votes on procedure”.



Wait a minute, didn’t his press release say he’d abstain from such votes?

So now his new story is just to deny the conflict:
"We all pay tax. Does that mean that members of parliament don't vote on income tax bills?" he said early this month.
Oh for god’s sake.

Infographics from http://www.abc.net.au


Friday, September 19, 2014

a blog about a list of lists about blogs

So, apparently, one of the easiest ways to write a blog post is to just write a list. Which explains why there are so bloody many of them: “7 ways to…”, “43 reasons why…”, “10 steps to…”, “8 mistakes…

So here’s a list of my own: a list of blogs about blog lists.

1. 8 Reasons Why Lists are Good for Getting Traffic to your Blog

2. 7 Reasons Why List Posts Will Always Work

3. The Top 10 Qualities of High-Quality List Posts

Nah. i’m bored now. 
You get the point.

With so man self-referential lists, it’s wonder the entire interwebs doesn’t just clag up in an infinite loop and implode.



Thursday, September 18, 2014

How Not To Do A Funeral Service


Having been to several funeral services in less than a year, I now feel somewhat of an expert on the dos and don’ts.
And by “several”, I mean two - which is a lot by my standards and is two more than anyone should ever have to go through. If I had my way no-one would ever die. (But then where would we put all the people? …I hear they are terraforming Mars…)

1. If the family asks you not to mention the cause of death, don’t
And along with not talking about how the dearly departed left us, especially don’t keep making reference to the fact that you’re not talking about it. 
It’s like when there’s an elephant in the room. You don’t point to it and yell “Ignore that elephant over there. Let me remind you that we are all ignoring the elephant!” 
Geeze.

Which leads me to point 2:

2. Don’t hire a numskull to MC the service
I know that’s a pretty tough call. You’re in shock and grief and the last thing you want to do is make funeral arrangements, and all those awful decisions. “Seriously? You want me to choose the wood for the casket while i’m falling apart emotionally?” It’s easiest just to put yourself in the hands of the nearest firm of funeral directors and let them take care of everything.

Only you don’t want to be feeling cranky at your loved one’s funeral.
There’s something off-putting about a complete stranger standing up in front of a person’s nearest and dearest and talking like he knew the deceased really well. When it’s so clear to all the actual friends and family that this person who’s conducting the ceremony, saying all that stuff about a person’s life and character, didn’t know the deceased even existed until a few days ago.

It was particularly jarring the day we farewelled my atheist friend’s atheist dad. His family and many friends like me were secularly inclined too, but the service was run by a priest who just banged on and on about God. He had no idea. Wrong, wrong, wrong.

and most importantly, because laughter really is the best medicine:

3. Open with a Joke
Funerals are hard work. Very hard. And they are, without doubt, heartbreakingly sad. Throughout the service the various speeches will be full of touching and emotional tributes to bring forth buckets of tears you didn’t even know you had in you. 


So best to break the ice and focus first on the fun parts of the deceased’s life. You know - the things you’d laugh about together if they were there in the room with you know. God knows, if they were in the room with you now, they’d want to be laughing with you not crying. Surely?

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

On Funerals

Funerals are a pain in the neck.

Ok, that sounds sounds selfish and flippant, but I mean it literally.

The day after we farewelled J – a 40-year-old ex colleague, who’d left behind a wife and kids, the littlest just barely 2 years old – I woke up with a stiff neck. The shooting pains sent me pretty briskly to one of those bulk, walk-in massage shops for the half-hour ‘neck & shoulders’ special. The practitioner seemed quite shocked, “Your shoulders are very bad”, asking if my life was particularly stressful at the moment. I told him  “I went to a funeral yesterday?” and with a knowing “say no more” shake of head, he advised several more treatments within the week to break down all those knots. Maybe they see this kind of thing a fair bit.

The funeral was hard. Aren’t funerals hard for everyone?

I think I spent the whole service in a tensed position. My shoulders were probably up around my ears the whole time. It was the slideshow at the end that hurt the most. Photos of his kids. happy, loving, innocent faces. I cannot understand what their life will be like with Daddy gone. Suddenly. How will Mum explain it to them? How will she get them through each day without falling apart herself, in front of them? 

I have no idea. I grieve for them. 

When I learned in the car on the way home that J committed suicide (that was the unspoken and logical theory, at least) my shoulders no doubt hunched so far up around my ears that the traffic sounds in the cross-city tunnel went all muffled. How do you explain that to his children? How could they understand why their dad would do such a thing? How painful and hellish must your life be that the only viable option to curing that hell is to just check out completely - regardless of the people you’ll leave behind.

I didn’t go back to the walk-in masseur. The muscles unlocked eventually and within a week the stabbing pains forgotten. But not J, or his wife, or his kids. They haunted me daily for a while, and now less and less over time. But he will always there. 

Less than a year later - far too soon - my neck muscles acted preemptively this time. The day before we were to farewell M, a friend from Uni, I woke up with pains so piercing I really could not move, not even a little bit. To quote my physio when she saw me a few days later - It was a shocker. The only way to get out of bed was to sit up lightning fast, like ripping off a bandaid, with a blinding blue/white flash of pain.

I dreaded the difficulty of another funeral and this would have been my perfect excuse to chicken out. I would have too, if I hadn’t organised two other uni friends to go with. They even did all the driving, since I couldn’t turn my head. 

By contrast, this service was not that hard. I loved the celebrant who at one stage so broke down she was unable to speak; I can only think she must have known M quite well. The ceremony was terribly sad - of course - that doesn’t even need to be said. But it was also joyful at times. A testament to the remarkable man who I wished - too late - I’d managed to stay in touch with after uni. 

The loving speeches were peppered with jokes and anecdotes. We cried, we laughed, we exchanged glances of surprise when we learned a few totally unexpected things about the guy. And perhaps all this was possible because his death was neither tragic or taboo. A sudden accident and with no drawn out suffering. He died doing what he loved. And you can’t really ask for more than that. 

At the wake, we uni buddies clustered magnetically and swore that we would have a reunion party very soon; promised ourselves that the next thing to bring us all together would not be the marking of another untimely death.

- - - - 

A few days later I was diagnosed with acute wry neck – though there was nothing cute about it, boom-tish – a fairly crippling condition that required bi-hourly therapy. But it’s mostly forgotten now. 

My Uni friends and I have since gone home, back to our regular lives. At the wake I made new-year’s-like resolutions to stay in touch regularly with every single one of my friends, on the basis that we could disappear at any second. 

I got all organised. To the guy who promised to host the party I sent a contact email address for another mutual friend to add to the invite list. I emailed old friends I’d lost touch with, some replied and we exchanged ever more vague promises to catch up as soon as we are both in the same city, until one way or another the email chains went quiet. 

I  slipped comfortably back into my unsociable, work focussed habits. Slipped back into easy habit.

I don’t hold my breath that the party will ever happen. Normal life just gets in the way and it takes something as massive as a death to drag us out of our daily routine and current social circle, to cancel all the usual appointments for the day, to ask for time off work and to drive across the city to a suburb we’d never normally have any reason to visit – to be reunited after countless years; to stand around drinking and laughing about old times, comparing unreliable memories, and realising that none of us has really changed, as if only a few weeks had passed since we last saw each other.

In the midst of life we are surrounded by death, and yet we carry on as if we are immortal – to paraphrase someone famous. And if you can find the original quote I’d love to have it.