Has anyone else noticed the thread of contrarianism that has been growing since climate change became a public policy issue? I know you would have and most likely engaged in this sort of debate/conversation, otherwise, you wouldn't be in this forum! However, I mean have you noticed the common thread?
While these people are not an electoral entity in Victoria and fading in the rest of Australia, they clearly have some impact on the social conversation, this is true across all of the ex-British colonies. However, in the UK they have a sizeable impact at the ballot box and in America, they are pretty much mainstream since Tea Party and then Trumpism morphed into a full-blown fascist movement.
There is almost an unthinking response. You can almost guarantee that if a person talks about a "climate hoax", they also think public health safety measures are a communist plot, are anti-migration, think that "wokeism" is taking over the world and are suspicious about conspiracies left and right and centre. The typical type thing that stands out to me is flag-waving patriots thinking that supporting Ukraine is against the interests of the US and their Western European allies, or those who are anti-taxation and regulation thinking that Davos is some sort of socialist plot. They also accuse the centre-left of being paedophiles, but then go into bat for George Pell.
There is definitely a large portion of grumpy old men feeling like they're losing their special place in the world, but there is also a large portion of grumpy middle-aged men and women from the petty bourgeoisie and a bunch of young men who sound like hippies complaining about "the system man". While I agree with taking mainstream information with a grain of salt, there is a knee-jerk rejection of anything that peer-reviewed science and bureaucrats, but then swallowing crazy conspiracy theories hook line and sinker.
What's going on?
What do you think is behind this?
How long is this going to influence our public discussion?
Can you see it having a resurgence in Australia, or is it a demographic thing that will die out?
While these people are not an electoral entity in Victoria and fading in the rest of Australia, they clearly have some impact on the social conversation, this is true across all of the ex-British colonies. However, in the UK they have a sizeable impact at the ballot box and in America, they are pretty much mainstream since Tea Party and then Trumpism morphed into a full-blown fascist movement.
There is almost an unthinking response. You can almost guarantee that if a person talks about a "climate hoax", they also think public health safety measures are a communist plot, are anti-migration, think that "wokeism" is taking over the world and are suspicious about conspiracies left and right and centre. The typical type thing that stands out to me is flag-waving patriots thinking that supporting Ukraine is against the interests of the US and their Western European allies, or those who are anti-taxation and regulation thinking that Davos is some sort of socialist plot. They also accuse the centre-left of being paedophiles, but then go into bat for George Pell.
There is definitely a large portion of grumpy old men feeling like they're losing their special place in the world, but there is also a large portion of grumpy middle-aged men and women from the petty bourgeoisie and a bunch of young men who sound like hippies complaining about "the system man". While I agree with taking mainstream information with a grain of salt, there is a knee-jerk rejection of anything that peer-reviewed science and bureaucrats, but then swallowing crazy conspiracy theories hook line and sinker.
What's going on?
What do you think is behind this?
How long is this going to influence our public discussion?
Can you see it having a resurgence in Australia, or is it a demographic thing that will die out?