The LNP’s decision to preference Labor over the Greens seems to have manoeuvred them out of power.
‘If Labor and the LNP want to work together to fight against us, that’s the whole political establishment up against us here,’ said Greens MP, Michael Berkman.
Mr Berkman was last seen complaining that (former) Premier Steven Miles stole his free lunch idea.
Could this mean that Labor has (finally) worked out that the Greens pose an existential threat to their party – a climate change, if you will, among the youth which has been nudged into ungovernable radicalism.
No doubt Labor thought they could win some cheap votes by indoctrinating school children into politicised environmentalism. A simple equation: Do you love the planet? Vote Green and give all your preferences to Labor.
Labor miscalculated the power of brainwashing and the Greens drip-fed young voters with anti-Labor sentiment, insisting that Albanese and his mates were peddlers of the capitalist machine killing the planet.
Casual observers were not surprised, but Labor certainly was when election after election started showing a continental drift of primary votes into the waters of genuine extremism. The Queensland election is no different. The Greens may end up seat-less, but they are likely to have their largest overall vote.
Socialist Greens, like all revolutionaries, cannot be reasoned with. Their goal is not the successful governing of Australia with different flavours of policy but rather the deliberate collapse of the political system in a green revolution – otherwise everyone is going to die in a fire and brimstone apocalypse.
Kids are given no reason to disbelieve this.
Every major political party nods their heads and says, ‘Oh yes, there is definitely a non-specific and immediate apocalypse. That is why we need all this money…’
Climate Change has become Santa Claus. The gifts under the tree are paid for by the taxpayer and handed out by the Nanny state, while the naughty kids get coal.
Older politicians understand the con. The youth lay out cookies, milk, and carrots.
Collapsing capitalism is a matter of life and death for them. These are not the kind of voters that can be lured back into the Labor fold by a few extra handouts. If they do defect, it will be much later, and directly into the arms of the opposite side of politics following a flood of tears. Not the Liberals, of course, because they continue to tell the same lies as Labor about the environment and redistribute the same subsidies to the renewables industry. These Greens voters are future conservative minor party voters in 20 years.
Australia is locked in a race between the creep of reality and the rush of propaganda.
Will we have a restoration or a revolution?
The LNP and Labor have decided to do something about this, labelling the Greens as ‘extremist’.
Far from a party that spends its days hugging Koalas, the Greens have placed their support behind internationally recognised terror groups and the vicious industrialisation of the natural environment for the profit of foreign companies and Chinese-based mining interests.
Without rehashing the many concerning personality traits of the Greens, the major parties, and the media have known their flaws for decades. It is only now that the power of the major parties is being threatened that they have decided to gut the movement. Previously, or perhaps perversely, both the LNP and Labor were happy to use screeching Greens MPs to justify otherwise unpopular positions.
The Blue-Red alliance is so determined to protect their political game that David Littleproud, the lead weight of the Nationals, has floated the idea of a more rigid preference deal with Labor. Yes, the LNP are prepared to do deals with Labor and yet they have treated conservative minor parties like trash over the years to the detriment of ideological balance. Maybe the Greens would not be such a problem if a conservative minor party had been allowed to grow strong enough to oppose them instead of being placed last by LNP preference deals…
‘If Labor was serious about this [Green problem], take our hand and let’s make a pact. Let’s put the Greens last.’
Why all the fuss about the Greens if the Greens have suffered a loss in Queensland? The Green movement is undermining Labor. Not only the Greens, but also the fragmentation of the Left vote into Islamic parties as was seen in the UK. Labor does not want to be in the same position as UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer with both a powerful eco-fascist Green movement and a radical anti-Western Islamic voting bloc. Those movements, both revolutionary socialist in nature, pose a significant threat to the continuation of the Westminster system of government.
Labor’s Employment Minister Murray Watt said:
‘Last night was a terrible result for the Greens and it gives us real hope that we can reclaim the seat of Griffith and potentially gain the seats in Brisbane and Ryan as well.’
Mr Watt indicated on Sky News Australia that radical Green voters in Brisbane did not get the progressive solutions they wanted. In other words, that the government was not radical enough to meet their ideological demands. ‘They have ended up getting a bunch of blockers and extreme activists who seem increasingly out of touch with what voters in those areas think.’
Meanwhile, Mr Littleproud’s assessment that the Greens are activists is correct, but there is no evidence to suggest that young inner-city voters have a problem with this. Government education programs have done nothing but champion the life of activism. It is not seen as a slur for those under 30.
If anything has damaged the Greens, it could be the temporary departure of the Hippie Greens – the old school Greens who really do believe in the environment and are accordingly disappointed by the destruction of rainforests, farmland, and coastlines during the energy transformation. We can also safely assume there are some young Greens who have become parents and have decided to take safety and economics into the equation at the ballot box.
These factors will not be enough. The Greens have a generation of brainwashed children approaching voting age. They have the tap of the youth, turned to full, and that flood will be more difficult to stem especially as the Greens can now blame the failures of their policies on the major parties not implementing them properly. We have seen this before. It is the, that was not real socialism line.
‘Adam Bandt and his team won’t stand in front of the Australian flag. They’re prepared to stand with the CFMEU and they’re also trying to weaponise the conflict in the Middle East,’ said Mr Littleproud.
Mr Littleproud and the LNP have another problem: the Teals.
They are the Champagne Greens. The Teals are Greens with expensive clothes, two cars, and a private education. They look down on the Greens despite reading from the same Holy Book.
For too long, the LNP have believed the defeat of the Teals lies in mimicking their virtue. Remember the embarrassing spectacle of LNP candidates brandishing near-identical apocalyptic banners? We believe in the climate apocalypse, so we are going to stop it, but more slowly.
Here is a tip.
It is offered for free and in the interest of sanity.
The Greens and the Teals are ideologies built on virtue.
They believe themselves to be the crusaders of the modern age. The spiritual elite. The saviours of the world preaching to the uneducated peasants and imparting their divine knowledge.
Attack their virtue.
Show the public the true horror of Net Zero environmentalism.
The corruption. The environmental destruction. The economic ruin. The lies and the power.
How many wealthy private-school families are going to vote for a political party that endorses slave labour in Africa, the burning of forests, and the mutilation of wildlife?
Preference deals are not the answer.
A culture war is.