Gina's pet red herring

I. The Red Herring and the Real Fish

II. The Mythology and What Sustains It

III. Ideological Consistency and Its Limits

IV. The Voting Record: Where the Worldview Meets the Ledger

V. Gina Rinehart and the Architecture of Alignment

VI. The Scarf, the Burqa, and the Politics of Costume

VII. The Safety Valve Function

VIII. The Class Lens and Its Limits

IX. On the Red Hair

X. What Comes After: The Harder Question

This Post Has 10 Comments

  1. Bill Wheatley

    Bakchos this is a strong, intellectually honest essay. It stands out in Australian political commentary for its refusal to indulge in the usual tribal shouting matches. You concede real grievances without qualification, ground your critique in the parliamentary voting record rather than vibes or headlines, and explicitly acknowledge the limits of your own analytical lens. That self-awareness—especially the repeated references to the “first draft” and the class lens’s blind spots—gives the piece credibility it would otherwise lack. The red herring metaphor is elegant and sustained without becoming gimmicky, and the closing return to the dyed red hair lands as a sharp, almost poetic payoff.

  2. The Faceless Freedom Fighter

    The “true interests” tension: You handle this better than most left-leaning critiques (explicitly rejecting “false consciousness” as patronising), but the piece still sometimes implies that union-backed IR reform is objectively in workers’ long-term interest while small-government flexibility is the “disease.” Empirical evidence here is mixed. Australia’s post-1990s labour market deregulation coincided with historically low unemployment and strong employment growth in regional/mining areas—precisely One Nation’s heartland. Casualisation and labour-hire growth have suppressed wages in some sectors, but mining communities have also seen high incomes relative to national averages when commodity prices are strong. Some labour-hire workers do prefer the flexibility and higher hourly rates (even if effective annual pay is lower). The essay could acknowledge that the data supports both narratives depending on the worker’s risk tolerance, industry, and location. Your conclusion already gestures at this; leaning into it harder would disarm the inevitable “you just don’t get regional Queensland” rebuttal.

  3. Kelly Conrad

    The Senate votes you highlight—Same Job Same Pay, industrial manslaughter, silica/asbestos regulation, wage theft criminal penalties (the 2021 tied division is especially damning), pay secrecy—are specific, verifiable, and damaging. Union sites and parliamentary records bear them out. Malcolm Roberts calling Same Job Same Pay a “sham” while labour-hire workers on the same mine site earn 20-30% less is the kind of concrete contradiction that sticks.

    1. Bakchos

      Kelly the reality is Pauline Hanson is a fake and a grifter.

    2. Bill Wheatley

      Good morning Kelly, a genuine alternative to Australia’s political duopoly – an alternative this country badly needs – will not be found in a movement whose economic positions, when tested against the Senate voting record, consistently serve the interests of capital over labour, even as its cultural positions exploit the anxieties of those who have been failed by both.

    3. Bill Wheatley

      a genuine alternative to Australia’s political duopoly – an alternative this country badly needs – will not be found in a movement whose economic positions, when tested against the Senate voting record, consistently serve the interests of capital over labour, even as its cultural positions exploit the anxieties of those who have been failed by both.

  4. Melissa

    I can’t believe that so many people are getting sucked in by her bull shit.

  5. Joseph

    Racism is a bad deal. It’s a bad deal wherever it appears.

    1. Bakchos

      Joseph, Australia is a very racist country

  6. Watershedd

    There’s another, more subtle message in the red hair. With fair skin and eyes, it projects an image of Celtic heritage, one that has remained consistent for three decades. Now, many people in politics colour their hair, including Julia Gillard, but they are not pushing such a hard right, anti-immigration stance. It helps to embed the perception of the Australian of settler origins, possibly convict, who has been robbed by invaders sponsored by its own government. The irony. To borrow a line from The Castle, “I’m starting to understand how the Aborigines feel!”

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