Thursday 26 March 2015

The Age of New Fundamentalism

Fundamentalism. The word often conjures the impression and images of fanaticism, extremism and a strict literal interpretation of doctrine. The term is usually associated with religious connotations and   unconditional adherence to a set of irreducible beliefs. It's  key characteristic of rejection of diversity of opinion or tolerance of any form of alternative intepretation poses a challenge to any society operating on a pluralist and diversity model. Fundamentalism is usually associated with conflict but this is not always exclusively the case. In the early 21st Century new fundamentalism has emerged based on old beliefs and paradigms but with new messaging methods.

Historically, Islam has experienced several periods of turmoil based on fundamentalism or in some cases forms of nationalism which have been linked to religious beliefs (however inappropriate this form of association may be). Since the 7th Century, there have been many Shia and Sunni internal religious conflicts and in later centuries, state-level expansionism by Islamic caliphates or States. This is by no means unusual as Christianity, Hinduism and Shintoism have also been linked to Nationalism or quasi nationalist causes at various times and engaged in various actions to expand their territorial influences.

Fundamentalist conflict and expansionism has often attracted followers from other parts of the world distant to the actual geographical location in which the conflict is taking place. Therefore it's not unusual that entities such as Daesh (or Islamic State [IS] as it tries to present itself ) might attract followers from other nations and societies. What has made Daesh effective in the promotion of its ideal has been the careful alignment of its message to similar conflict narratives and dramatic motifs conveyed in Western  media.

This theme has been explored by Jeff Lewis, Professor of Media and Cultural Politics at RMIT,  who has commented "..consider the ways in which our news is structured, and the political debates which are perennially laced by visions of social, economic and ecological collapse.....IS has mimicked the style and force of these heroic and erotic apocalyptic narratives. An examination of the IS images and narratives reveals the same masculinist potency as Hollywood thrillers.."

During the 1930s and until the commencement of World War II, Nazi Germany was supported by sympathetic fascist movements which existed in the United States, Great Britain, the Baltic States and across Europe. The dire nature of Hitler's movement did not dissuade support for his ideology, which in many respects also had elements of a death cult, as evidenced by the conduct of the regime during the war and at the end in 1945. During WWII, the police/security organisation of the Nazi State, known as the SS (which coincidentally had the death's head as their emblem) had over 350,000 troops drawn from over 25 countries serving in its military arm, the Waffen SS. The German Army, the Wehrmacht, had many more bringing the total number of foreigners under German command to around 1 million.

During the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) between the Republican Government and the Nationalists under General Francisco Franco, in addition to the support for the two sides afforded by various Governments, over 45,000 volunteers from around the world supported the Republic of whom 32,000 were in combat roles in the International Brigades. A further 10,000 served in various capacities in medical, nursing and engineering. These volunteers were drawn from Europe, the United States and beyond. They were just a fervent in their belief for the cause as those who were born and lived in Spain.

Challenging and disproving the legitimacy of the public media narrative of Daesh in the Middle East remains as important a task as actual military action.

The Photograph and Australia - Exhibition Review - Art Gallery of NSW - 21 March to 8 June 2015

 
Migrants arriving in Australia - David Moore, 1966
The Photograph and Australia is the most substantial large-scale thematic photographic exhibition that has been held in Australia for the past 25 years. Covering the period from the 1840s to 2015 and drawn from 35 private and public collections from across Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, the exhibition investigates the role that photography has played in shaping Australians views of the world, themselves and each other. The exhibition explores four themes: settler and indigenous relations; exploration; portraiture; and transmission being spread over nine rooms in the main temporary exhibition space at the Art Gallery of NSW.  The images in the exhibition trace the evolution of the photographic medium and its many uses covering documentary, commemorative to speculative and conceptual while posing questions about how Australia has been represented and imagined through photography.

The nine rooms in the exhibition are separately titled with sub themes: Self and Image; Imaging Place; People and Place; Picturing the colony; Cities and Communities; Becoming Modern; Critique; Technology; and Time and Transmission.  The selection of works contains some of the earliest examples of photography from the mid to late 19th Century hence special dimmed lighting enables ease of viewing.

Artists represented include Morton Allport, Richard Daintree, Paul Foelsche, Samuel Sweet, JJ Dwyer, Charles Bayliss, Frank Hurley, Harold Cazneaux, Olive Cotton, Max Dupain, David Moore, Sue Ford, Carol Jerrems, Tracey Moffatt, Simryn Gill, Robyn Stacey, Ricky Maynard, Anne Ferran, David Stephenson and many others.

This is a must-see exhibition which has been in the planning for over four years and contains many unique and fragile works rarely seen in public. The exhibition runs until 8 June 2015.

Thursday 5 March 2015

Australia in 2055 - The 2015 Intergenerational Report

The Australian Government has released the latest Intergenerational Report 2015 as required by the Charter of Budget Honesty Act which has a stipulation for the report to be produced every five years (The previous ones being in 2002, 2007 and 2010). This much anticipated report contains a number of key themes which have been enunciated by the Federal Government and the Federal Treasurer.

Of note:
Population: Male life expectancy is projected to rise from 91.5 years to 95.1 years in 2050. Female life expectancy will rise from 93.6 years to 96.6 years in the same period. There are likely to be 40,000 people aged over 100 years by 2055 and.the population is projected to reach 39.7 million.

Economic growth: is projected to be 2.8 % per annum on average over the next forty years with the annual income per Australian rising from $66,500 today to $117,300 by 2055. The Australian Government is currently spending over $100 million per day more than it collects in revenue and is borrowing to meet the shortfall. The total costs of interest payments amounts to $40 million per day  to cover this debt.

Health spending: is projected to increase from 4.5 % of GDP to 5.5 % by 2054-55. If the proposed current budget approach is not followed health expenditure will reach 7.1% of GDP by 2054-55.

Social Services: currently the Federal Government spend $150 billion or 35 % of the Commonwealth Budget covering pensions, aged care, payments to families and individuals and the National Disability Insurance Scheme. This is expected to rise but is  projected to be placed on a sustainable pathway.

Education: As the population ages it is forecast that the proportion of the population in education will be smaller especially in primary and secondary sectors. It is projected nonetheless that the cost per person will rise from $1,500 today to $1,900 in 2054-55.

The Report in many aspects reflects the perspective of the current Federal Government but it does not convey that the Australian economy is, in any form, in a critical state nor that there is a budget crisis. There are however challenges to meet over the next 5 to 10 years. The Report also devotes little content to the issue of climate change and its corresponding impact on health and economic activity. This critical factor will have greater influence, predominantly negative, as each decade passes.

The report can be accessed via the link below:

Sunday 1 March 2015

Aircraft, contrails and climate change - options for change

White contrails often seen streaking across the sky are the water vapour in hot aircraft exhaust which freezes when it meets cold moist air in the atmosphere. These contrails can and do form into wispy cirrus clouds which trap heat and thus contribute to global warming and more so that the actual carbon emissions from the aircraft themselves. Are there options to address this effect ?

Noting that there are few viable technological options for reducing contrails, one proposal canvassed by researchers, Irvine, Hoskins and Shine, is to consider re-routing aircraft to control emissions depending on the weather. In one transit model posited by the researchers, a 13.7 mile detour for a transatlantic flight eliminated a contrail 62 miles long and the clouds which would have formed from it.

Whether this method can have a practical application remains to be seen. The need for considering relatively cost-effective options with a positive environmental result remains paramount.

The original research article can be found at the link below: