Australia's leading libertarian and centre-right blog
Written by Samuel J
February 28th, 2013 at 9:30 am
Posted in Catallaxy Survey,SJ
Subscribe to comments with RSS or TrackBack to 'Catallaxy survey 5 – closed'.
The heart of the matter is the way public debt allows the current generation of voters to live at the expense of those as yet too young to vote or as yet unborn. In this regard, the statistics commonly cited as government debt are themselves deeply misleading, for they encompass only the sums owed by governments in the form of bonds.
— Niall Ferguson
The Journalist template by Lucian E. Marin — Built for WordPress. Hosted at Ozblogistan. Queries: 29, Time: 0.292
What an inane survey.
Why not do a survey on which rugby side will win the premiership?
Or how about whether Abbott will do a lap of victory clockwise or anti-clockwise around Parliament House in his budgie smugglers when he wins the elections?
Thought this was more of an intellectual blog than this.
Peter
28 Feb 13 at 9:44 am
Do not underestimate the frenzy that the Fourth Estate will go into if Rudd makes a comeback. In my judgement, he will make all sorts of claims about cleaning out the Augean Stables, a new beginning, in fact announcing a Royal Commission into Union malfeasance.
He’s a sociopath – like TLS – and will do anything to keep his hands on the steering wheel.
Winston SMITH
28 Feb 13 at 9:47 am
If you’d been keeping up instead of just shooting your stupid mouth off, Peter, you’d remember just why we are doing these surveys.
Winston SMITH
28 Feb 13 at 9:49 am
Must admit I’m grappling with the relevance of this one.
candy
28 Feb 13 at 2:43 pm
One of the problems with the survey questions is that they deal with dictated hypothetical situations and not the likelihood of those situations arising.
I’d rather:
“Do you think Rudd will resume the ALP leadership?”
“If Rudd were to resume the leadership would it be before or after the next election?”
“Were Rudd to resume the leadership of the ALP before the next election do you think the ALP would retain government?”
One of the problems with my questions is that it the widely held beliefs of this blogs readership is well known. Add to that selection bias, and the results are as good as those from the above survey.
Forgetting what we (the readership) would like to see, the Australian people have sent very strong signals that it doesn’t really matter who leads the ALP. A discussion surrounding the fourth estate’s reaction to a potential Rudd return (or other leadership change) may pose a good source of future questions. (Could be only two weeks away).
Poida
28 Feb 13 at 5:06 pm
Dear Peter – like any survey, sometimes you’ll like them and sometimes you’ll hate them. But suggestions are always welcome.
Samuel J
28 Feb 13 at 6:29 pm
btw, the point of this survey is just to make a point. If Labor MPs hate Rudd, have been willing to remove him previously, how do we know they wouldn’t do so again if a restored Rudd somehow wins the election? Can you imagine how insufferable Rudd would be if he wins the next election?
Samuel J
28 Feb 13 at 6:31 pm
That is the reason why I believe Shorten will be installed if it looks like Rudd will win the ballot as the people who hate him would not want to possibility that he would lead the party in government for another 3 years.
Token
28 Feb 13 at 6:34 pm
Gillard’s largest policy failure could be the next poll?
Andrew
1 Mar 13 at 7:21 am
I have a suggestion:
Should most of the crown land in Northern Australia be given away in a homesteading bonanza?
.
1 Mar 13 at 9:49 am