Bogus Bogan really is hooked on the Greeny tactic of divide and conquer where a whole article is broken up into little pieces and then discussed as totally separate items.
This tactic is not very successful as it is boring to follow and the comments added are usually so wacky and personally biased and irrelevant as to be absurd.
The correct response is to consider the article as a whole and discuss it accordingly. But the tiny Greeny mind just cannot cope with the whole article and has no hope of ever understanding it.
It was a master stroke by ScoMo to bring in ITA to break up the ABC Socialist Propaganda Station and to deprive the Socialists of a media outlet.
That ridiculous program Q+A is scheduled for the rubbish tin as it is just embarrassing Socialist rubbish.
Now here is something that will raise Bogus Bogan's hackles.
Columns on the ABC and climate change open the comments floodgates
NICK CATER 11:05PM DECEMBER 31, 2019
Departing Q&A host Tony Jones.
Few things evoke as much pleasure in a reader’s heart as the discovery of a typo. Few can resist the opportunity afforded to cut a columnist down to size with a tart online comment.
Chris was one of many who jumped in to correct an apparent howler in a column on GetUp antics in October. “A decidedly good article, Mr Cater,” he wrote, “but I think it should be harebrained, not hairbrained.”
Fortunately, Ilan was on hand to explain what I thought I meant to say. “Nick is referring to the medical condition whereby the hair follicles on the crown of the head grow inward and downward, ultimately disrupting a person’s ability for valid cognition,” he wrote.
One trusts that the compilers of the Macquarie Dictionary have noted this correspondence and will revise the definition accordingly.
Readers, let’s face it, are not incapable of an occasional typo themselves.
“What a lot of cabbage (sic),” Samuel commented on a column on the federal election result. “I juts (sic) hope the LNP smell their own exhaust fumes … it was only due to the redmecks (sic) in Qld that won the election.”
“Slow down Sam, slow down,” responded Peter with evident concern. “Think of your poor keyboard.”
Insofar as the volume of online comments is a measure of the heat beneath readers’ collars, the ABC remained top of mind this year. More than one respondent accused The Australian of fomenting it.
“Good to see that The Oz is sticking to its tried and tested themes that are guaranteed to give those who like to post comments value for money,” typed David in response to a column in June. Apparently, we were missing the issues “everyday Australians actually talk about”.
Yet everyday readers of The Australian needed little prompting to pile into the ABC, an institution to which many had once felt close but from which they are now estranged.
“Hand on heart,” wrote Andrew, a self-described media carnivore, “I have not watched ABC TV News or 7.30 Report for eight years, at least. As boring as bird-dirt. Bring back Norman Gunston and Aunty Jack.”
John added: “My wife and I got so sick of the same garbage night after night we pulled up stumps on the ABC news and all their current affairs programs and subscribed to Sky News.”
Defenders of the ABC replied with ad hominem. “Perhaps you could watch a few programs and you might be a bit more informed and not as sarcastic,” wrote Lee-Ann.
I couldn’t help feeling that her judgment was a little harsh since I sat through an entire episode of Q&A this year, albeit in the studio as a panel guest where one is denied the respite afforded by the off button.
The cost to the nation’s health of the unreformed ABC is a topic worthy of further exploration.
“I don’t listen to or watch anymore because it’s very bad for my heart,” wrote one reader. Anne complained that the “insulting trash” from the ABC’s comedy department was “as funny as having a kidney removed”.
Columns about climate policy drew equal ferocity. This time, however, the flak came from both sides.
“The real problem today is the cohort of conservatives, like Cater, that can’t accept well evidenced science because of their ideologically blinked (sic) view,” wrote Guy. “The message that Cater and the other deniers need to understand is that the science is in.”
From the other side many readers were disappointed at my support for the government’s affordable emission reduction target.
“Mr. Cater, have you lost the plot?” asked Malcolm. “I strongly believe that the Coalition DOES have a mandate to roll back the climate change claptrap, resolve the ABC bias problem, and so on. Don’t throw in the towel now, Nick!”
David was one of many Snowy 2.0 sceptics unconvinced by my arguments in favour of pumped hydro. “There are times when Cater speaks sense and there are times when he speaks nonsense. This is one of the latter … Snowy 2 is a ridiculous concept.”
Others felt moved to soothe any hurt feelings. “You’ve summed it up brilliantly,” typed Louise. “Stimulated by an innovative thought-provoking article from Nick Cater. The reason I subscribe to The Australian.”
Robust criticism, for an opinion columnist, is just a sign that you are doing your job. It is praise that keeps you on your toes as a reminder that the editor publishes your work at the readers’ pleasure. You break faith with them at your peril.
A defence of the Melbourne Cup, for example, had a few too many swipes at the tofu-munching, Guardian-reading, finger-wagging greenies for some readers’ liking.
Kat was one of many who, perhaps not entirely unfairly, accused me of stereotyping.
“It is not just vegans or elitists who have a problem with the cruelty of the horse racing industry,” she wrote. “The comments show how easily the discussion can be shifted to a right versus left argument … It’s divisive but very effective.”
Jay pleaded: “Not all of us ethically-eating vegetarians/vegans are of the Left persuasion. Please don’t lump all of us in the same boat.”
“I think you are going a bit far here, Nick,” wrote Richard. “Please don’t jump into demeaning everyone with arts degrees, just because most of them are Muppets.”
As a graduate in sociology with a bachelor of arts, I should have known better, but the learning never stops in this game.
Humour can be an effective weapon, but no matter how artfully it is signalled not every reader will get the joke.
“A friend raised some serious questions about the cauliflower burger on a hemp and cucumber bun,” wrote Simon. “Can you smoke it?”
At the end of a year in which not every one of my words received universal acclaim, I thank readers for posting more than 12,000 comments and sincerely apologise to any I might have offended. Let me assure them that I had no intention of poking fun at vegans or the odd combinations of beans, nuts, indigestible grains and cabbage to which they turn for nourishment.
Nick Cater is executive director of the Menzies Research Centre.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commen ... e8208b7fb9
COMMENTS from the man in the street
Katherine 24 MINUTES AGO
We have had the ABC channel surgically removed from our remote. No danger therefore of accidentally seeing even a millisecond of Q&A as we scroll through the channels.
I think the government should consider a plebiscite to see if we still want to pay for the ABC. It might put the wind up them.
Trevor 28 MINUTES AGO
Can anyone explain why the ABC does not allow comment?
L.B. 12 MINUTES AGO
They would not like the comments made by those who pay their exorbitant salaries and it would add to their minimal work-load by having to moderate comments (viz exclude all they do not agree with)?
Russell 13 MINUTES AGO
pretty obvious actually. it would expose the myth perpetuated by their spin doctors.
Jean 38 SECONDS AGO
They would only publish about 5% of them, so why bother.?
Les R 16 MINUTES AGO
The ABC does not like to receive criticism on any front. I would see many comments, including some of mine, rejected by their moderators.
Happy New Year to all the moderators.
John 1 HOUR AGO
When is the ABC going to open its news sites to readers’ comments?
Brad (the quiet Australian) 1 HOUR AGO
They aren't likely to do that. With less than a 10% share of the audience, you don't think many will be supportive of their plight? I know I wouldn't be.