The other day I was waiting for my coffee, and having
already read with interest the local free paper that was lying about in
numerous copies (our MP in the NSW Parliament was picked up driving at three
times the legal blood alcohol limit; he has apologised profusely), I flicked
instead through a copy of Green Left
Weekly that someone had left lying about.
I found, on perusing this paper, that it irritated me very
much less than the average copy of the Devil
Bunny City Morning Herald, a mildly left-of-centre paper that was mild
enough to endorse Tony Abbott at the last federal election. I was thinking
about why this might be the case, and have come up with several reasons.
Firstly, I have a weakness for people who are passionate
about things, even if they are passionate about crushing all that I hold dear.
There is something stirring in seeing anyone who really believes in what they
are saying get up and voice an opinion in the face of opposition.
Secondly, the things that Green Left Weekly concerns itself about are mostly concrete things,
and this gives it more of a sense of proportion than one finds in the
mainstream media. Overwhelmingly, the
articles concerned actual people with less money in their pay packets or not,
or actual trees being cut down or not. There was hardly anything about those
vacuous point-scoring sort of progressive issues on which the Devil Bunny City Morning Herald spends
so much of its efforts.
Thirdly, the Devil
Bunny City Morning Herald is, like the ABC, part of the establishment, and
it speaks with the condescension of the establishment towards minority views,
which is infuriating; Green Left Weekly
knows it is the voice of a minority, and does not speak in this same voice.
Fourthly, another consequence of being part of the establishment
left-of-centre is that the writers of the Devil
Bunny City Morning Herald live inside a bubble, where everyone they meet
thinks the same way as they do, and they are never required to defend their
tiresomely conventional views with rational argument. So their pieces are
either devoid of rational argument, or employ it very badly. The writers for Green Left Weekly, being a minority, are
accustomed to engaging in arguments for defending what they believe, and
employing reason in doing so, and this shows in what they write. There was an
article on the situation on Iraq which eschewed vitriol and hyperbole; which
set out a proper argument; which employed rational thought; and which, though I
disagreed with its conclusions, I thought made a better case than articles
reaching the same conclusions I have read by authors on the libertarian
right-of-centre.
The other day I was waiting for my coffee, and having
already read with interest the local free paper that was lying about in
numerous copies (our MP in the NSW Parliament was picked up driving at three
times the legal blood alcohol limit; he has apologised profusely), I flicked
instead through a copy of Green Left
Weekly that someone had left lying about.
I found, on perusing this paper, that it irritated me very
much less than the average copy of the Devil
Bunny City Morning Herald, a mildly left-of-centre paper that was mild
enough to endorse Tony Abbott at the last federal election. I was thinking
about why this might be the case, and have come up with several reasons.
Firstly, I have a weakness for people who are passionate
about things, even if they are passionate about crushing all that I hold dear.
There is something stirring in seeing anyone who really believes in what they
are saying get up and voice an opinion in the face of opposition. I don’t doubt that that the writers at the Devil Bunny City Morning Herald believe
what they are writing: and to an extent, perhaps, if exactly the same op-eds
had appeared in a paper explicitly aimed at a leftist fringe, they would not
bother me as much.
Secondly, the things that Green Left Weekly concerns itself about are mostly concrete things,
and this gives it more of a sense of proportion than one finds in the
mainstream media. Overwhelmingly, the
articles concerned actual people with less money in their pay packets or not,
or actual trees being cut down or not. There was hardly anything about those
vacuous point-scoring sort of progressive issues on which the Devil Bunny City Morning Herald spends
so much of its efforts.
Thirdly, the Devil
Bunny City Morning Herald is, like the ABC, part of the establishment, and
it speaks with the condescension of the establishment towards minority views; Green Left Weekly
knows it is the voice of a minority, and does not speak in this same infuriating voice.
Fourthly, another consequence of being part of the establishment
left-of-centre is that the writers of Devil
Bunny City Morning Herald live inside a bubble, where everyone they meet
thinks the same way as they do, and they are never required to defend their
tiresomely conventional views with rational argument. So their pieces are
either devoid of rational argument, or employ it very badly. The writers for Green Left Weekly, being a minority, are
accustomed to engaging in arguments for defending what they believe, and
employing reason in doing so, and this shows in what they write. There was an
article on the situation on Iraq which eschewed vitriol and hyperbole; which
set out a proper argument; which employed rational thought; and which, though I
disagreed with its conclusions, I thought made a better case than articles
reaching the same conclusions I have read by authors on the libertarian
right-of-centre.
2 comments:
Couldn't agree with you more. If you have something to say, say it twice!
For a minute I thought you were testing me to find differences between the repeated passages to make a point....
I have continued to ignore opinions that I've seen before. If logic and reason are used to make a point, I usually take that point on board, regardless of whether the point is usually taken to be a partisan opinion. Thus I have a lot of opinions which appear to contradict other opinions I also hold dearly.
Hmm, yes. It seems that Word and Blogger become more and more incompatible with each passing day. It was not intentional, but I will leave it like that now!
Post a Comment