Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Australians call for a new flag

What a silly issue to raise now? This is what small-minded Australians do when they get a title. They invest in small-minded issues which will be their legacy. "Yeh...see that flag! We did that! We are great Australians!".
I would have thought people were more interested in changing our hopeless system of government which cannot even settle such an inconsequential issue as changing a flag. How many decades has it been? How many millions wasted? Why don't we just let Oprah decide?

The problem with flags is that they are empty symbols. Do we need a new flag. Most certainly for the following reasons:
1. We are not terribly British any more, but we are significantly so that that is not even a very compelling issue. Do we like being British? Well, I don't much like their values, but then most of you love mateship, democracy and other things you don't understand or define.
2. It doesn't distinctly define our values...but then any abstract value is hard to depict on a simple flag. Which flag does?
3. Identify a nation - most certainly this is the most important - people ought to think of Australia when they see it. The number one candidate would have to be some depiction of the kangaroo because it is uniquely Australia. Everyone knows that kangaroos come from Australia...even some Ethiopian who will never come here.

When I am in a bar in Japan, and I tell them I'm Australian...they go "Australia..hehe..kangaroo, koala". Then I say "Stuff it up your XXXX and give me another beer".

That's right the rest of the world knows nothing either....so but at least they will know you're Australia....for all the good it will do you...you will still pay Y600 for a beer!
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Political correctness gone mad?

Political correctness gone mad? There was a news item on TV3 last night about a tennis player at the Melbourne-based Australian Open. She ended up apologising and retracting a story she told about being accosted by a koala. Apparently she made up the story to add some excitement to her press release, which she earlier stated were a rather boring affair.
It makes you think that some person from Tourism Australia, or maybe Tennis Australia has asked her to retract the statement because it paints koalas in a bad light. This is all my speculation of course because these things are not talked about. But, it would surprise no one.
Is there anything wrong with this. Not really. But as a side issue it is not an issue of factual correctness....its about money. The money of tourist operators. Not that they are likely to be consulted. Its would be the executive decision of a government agency.
There is - no question - great value in creating the perception that koalas are cute animals; and that they would never hurt anyone. The reality however is that they can be dangerous. But the reality is more dangerous. My issue however is with the lack of respect for facts. We would have people believe certain things about Australia so they come here as tourism. Why are we so invested in the opinions of a tennis champ? Does anyone care about her 'koala experience'?
I just think, watching the Oprah special on Australia, that they will fly in & out thinking Australia is a beautiful place. Well, it is. But how real will the experience be for anyone else because anyone taking their advice might struggle absorbing the cost of a fantasy adventure which only Oprah and a few others can afford and get the same access to. i.e. Don't expect anyone to be offering a 'barbie' on the beach when you arrive in Sydney. Oh, but you know that right! Just wanted to make sure because there is no tennis player to tell you. :)
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Extent of Brisbane flooding

There is no better way to observe the extent of flooding than by looking at aerial photos of an area before and after. Here the ABC provides such photos for a multitude of suburbs which are affected by flooding. By passing your cursor over the photo, you can see the before and after photos.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Drinking beer under-rated

The latest statistics suggest that Australians are drinking far less. Beer consumption has fallen considerably, however wine consumption has picked up some absolute sales, and a large share of the alcohol market. There are likely two reasons for this:
1. The positive health reinforcements about wine
2. The over-supply of wine keeping prices down

I personally love my wine, and am pissed off that I can't drink it. The problem is that for people like myself beer contains high purine levels which is destined to give me gout if I consume it. The reasons for the lost market share of beer are:
1. The appeal of pre-mixed drinks
2. Probably the greater policing with breathalisers
3. Recession-induced cultural change. The party is over....long live the party!
4. Global warming has caused beer temperatures to increase....Aussies are rightly miffed!
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Rainfall in Queensland causes flooding disaster

Queensland is struggling to cope with record floood waters after being swamped by high rainfalls over the last week. The Bureau of Meteorology service offers very good statistics to gauge the impact. Looking at the map, it is apparent that most of the Brisbane River Basin (Qld) and parts of the Clarence-Moreton Basin (NSW) have received over 0.5 metres of water. When you appreciate that there is 0.5m of water entering these rivers across a basin, and that this water is scarcely regulated by reservoir catchments, then you must wonder how high the water level is going to rise. The river has so far risen to 6 metres, and the flooding is not over.
Apparently Australia relies on the general insurance market to cover risks from flooding, though Senator Boswell has advanced the idea of establishing a nationwide flood levy.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

The Australian people

What a job - to characterise the Australian people. I might get accused of over-generalising, but here goes. First of all, there is a personal context in every person's life. I have met Australians who I very much liked. I am reminded of an Australian I met in Tokyo. He must have thought I was gay. I say to him "How come I don't meet any Australians like you in Australia". He said: "I wouldn't have any friends if he discussed the subject matter at hand"...anyway, words to those effect. I couldn't argue with that. But then...did he need to be liked by everyone...why not an 'interesting minority. This is my loathing of practical people...they are defined by others. It kind of makes him two-faced. But I understand we all hold back to achieve goals. But then the extent to which he is defining himself as something other than he is, just makes my think, to what end? What new low does a society have to descend to before it stands up and says 'enough!'. So clearly there are expatriates who are as disappointed by the state of the Australian psyche as me...but they are more practical than me....or maybe that just reflects the fact that I live off investments in mining stocks. Mind you, it got a little hairy last year when two of my stocks went broke because of the corruption in mining. The problem is that stocks can be low for two reasons:
1. They are under-valued
2. ASIC is not doing its job - and at the low end of the market, unless you listen to rumours in WA, because you drink with mining executives, you are not likely to know. Maybe I ought to go live in WA.

So back to the Australian people. We tend to think Australians are easy-going people, and this is certainly true. I love that aspects about them. I think they have a lot of personal pride, and also a pride in their country, which I could care less about. Its as much a pride in their lifestyle as anything else. Not really an attribute to take pride in - like the climate - but they manage to do it. I think the reason is - they are proud of retaining the best secret in the world - their country - without getting on the internet and bleating about it.
The problem in Australian is the liberal or social democratic values which dominate the country. There is this collectivist pride in nation, whether it be its lifestyle, values, 'the empire', which make me sick, but which makes them think they are pretty good, when in fact its not their achievement at all, but notionally the fact that they live in a country with immense mineral & energy resources, little competition (because its a small, isolated market) and because are just 21 million people sharing this bounty.
These liberal values mean that despite these advantages, they are 'pilfered away' like they are in Norway or Brunei. They are wasted on the poor and subsidising corporations, at a huge opportunity cost to them and everyone else.
There is a divide in the country. A great many Australians are outward looking and aspirational. This aspirational nature, is no question, underpinned by a commonsense, practicality, however I would describe them as intellectually, under-developed, to the point of insecurity. These people are goal-orientated, and sadly this comes at a price of psychological repression. This is a worldwide phenomenon, so maybe you can relate.
Australians are among the most well-travelled people in the world, despite being the most remote (aside from NZ), though arguably that is why you travel. Australia in my youth did feel like a 'poorer cousin', but that is no longer the case. Maybe that is reflected in the currency. In the 1970s to 1980s the currency fell from $1.20 to $0.50...today its back to $1.01 against the USD, and it will probably get up to $1.35 in the next 10 years.
Educational standards are comparable to other countries....that is bad. Friendships are pretty superficial in the upper and lower class. Intrinsic love from the lower class, social climbing from the aspirational middle and upper classes, regardless of whether the value is wealth or pretensions of such.
I seldom meet real people in Australia. It is manly to be psychologically repressed, and women might well be judged by the same standard. Sadly women confused altruism with empathy, so when they became career-orientated, they sadly set aside their better nature.
In contrast to Australians, I think I would prefer the company of expatriate Western men and aspirational Filipino women. Why? Standards of value are richer when compared between countries, and I have met a number of Filipino women who have impressed me....fewer men...but then I was not really mixing.
In comparison with NZ, I would say NZ men are even more repressed, psychologically less developed, i.e. Subjects of tough love. NZ is far more of a welfare state, and the aspirational class is less developed, and enslaved by the state. A great many might well understand that on some level because there are probably 700,000 of them in Australia, with a further 30,000 coming to Australia each year.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Best place in the world

There is no question in my mind that Australia is one of the best countries to live, but it does have some very unappealing elements. The problem I have come to realise is that there is no perfect place, and that you really have to 'create your own paradise'. In a sense, you kind of have to live a life in 'transience' to get what you want. For me, living the life as an expatriate is ultimately the way to live, spending time in each of the best places. The modern creates those opportunities, but sadly the world is not entirely a pleasant place. There are several sordid elements, and it relates to people's values. Those elements are:
1. Arbitrary statutory law - unlike common law its a collectivist tyranny divorced from context, and the government which imposes them; whether we are talking social standards, tax laws (to extort as governments do) or self-serving corruption.
2. Narrow minded, unthinking people with low self esteem, low education who engage in proclamations of their intrinsic or socially-defined worth, irrespective of the facts, which convey a different 'reality' to the rationalisation or feelings they conjure up in their own minds, or which social liberals create for them to spare them any guilt for imposing their arbitrary needs on others.

Australia, and for that matter NZ, have those elements, and of course every country has them. One has to acknowledge that its pretty bad in Australia. My solution is to live in Australia, but to not base your business there if you can. You can set up a company in NZ, as Australia, and get a number of the same benefits, but save the cost. Operating a company in NZ is half the cost as Australia, you don't need a local director (like Australia), then just pay yourself a base-line salary in Australia below the desired tax threshold.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

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