Election time especially can see a strange metamorphosis occur. Candidates promise to understand and serve the will of the people yet can soon change from servant to master. It is not what is said but what is not said - that is concerning. Yes, space is limited but for a photo shopped candidate to state he/she is in favour of something equivalent to healthy families, clean rivers, blue skies, transparency and accountability, which is not particularly helpful.
The “sin of omission” is hardly an issue that keeps us all awake at night, but during the election period the impact of deliberate omission can be profound.
Reports to and from councils or Governments can often
leave out information crucial to enable a full public understanding of a given
issue especially if the likely outcome will change if the omission is included.
Omission is therefore often deliberate to help foster a misconception of any
given reality. Nor is the deliberate omission of important information, solely
the preserve of central and local government. Verbal gymnastics is common
place.
False promises rank alongside the sin of emission when
the outcome promised is known to be unachievable. Peace studies at Otago
University has a laudable purpose yet their lofty goal has never led to the end
of any conflict or even lessened one. The Greek Pericles said if you want peace
- prepare for war, which is a far more honest and realistic approach given the
history of the human condition. Curiously, the Centre for Peace Studies omits
to inform the public of its success rate. A former prime Minister (Helen Clarke) once
famously but incorrectly stated “we live in a benign environment”. Such a happy
condition may have lasted for a few weeks in the world before business as usual
(which was entirely predictable) - resumed.
The promise to end child poverty is another example.
Nothing could be more appealing yet the complete failure (omission) to remind us
of continuing past failures (or even success) to end child poverty - anywhere -
is compelling evidence of the political hope that some of the public are
hearing of populist solutions for the first time. Taxing the rich to end child poverty has
considerable appeal. Such a move would also and unsurprisingly include many of
the wealthy if they thought for one moment that more tax was the answer to end poverty.
If it was, most countries would have solved the issue years ago. It would also
be helpful if the data which today shows more children living in cars these
days is incorrect. Yet again the
omission of this important information is very telling.
Predator free by 2050 along with carbon neutrality are
but two more examples of the sin of omission. These outcomes require so much
more than comforting words from politicians which simply leads to increased
expectation, which, left unfulfilled, is followed by resentment.
The half-truth is often taken to an art form at
election time and usually contains some deceptive elements as to the risk of
failure of a given project. The Dunedin hospital rebuild appears to be heading
in a direction where the public have little idea of how many beds and wider
facilities will be built due to “inflationary pressures”. Whether or not
crucial data reflecting the final outcome is being withheld at this time is a
moot point and further exemplifies the sin of omission. It’s all rather strange
as we, the rate and taxpayer, are paying the piper yet updated information of costs
are withheld.
The housing problem and its obfuscation is simply too
obvious to bother with elaboration.
Society (by majority) appears to favour decisions
being made to omit/ ignore hard economics in favour of softer economics. The
“left” set aside the hard solutions in favour of soft landings due to electoral
realities which all political parties exercise to a greater or lesser degree.
Doing so perpetuates ongoing failures in many sectors while still convincing
enough voters that the left really does care more but just not enough to change
the reality.
We all tend to ignore others’ limited subjective
experience in favour of our own absolute truth which can also be based on
limited subjective experience. Too
often a particular and isolated belief exemplifies any genuine understanding of
life’s realities.
An old Hindu story is told of some blind men who had
no experience nor understanding of what an elephant looks like. An elephant was
presented to the men, and each was asked to describe a particular but different
part of an elephant that each was comfortable to touch and feel. One felt a
leg, one the trunk, another the tail and one the tusk. Each man knew his
description of the elephant was correct, yet each was wrong as it was based on each
other’s very limited experience of one area of an elephant. Conflict then
occurred because each man was correct, yet each conclusion was wrong as their
personal experience of one area of the elephant was far from a total reality.
Their opinion was subjective and ignored each other’s opinions.
So oft in theologic war
The disputants, I wean
Rail on in utter ignorance
Of what each other mean
And prate on about an elephant
Not one of them has ever seen
- John Godfrey Saxe (1816-1887)
The public is soon to be asked to vote for
representatives on extremely limited information. The requirement for greater diversity
to rank ahead of judgment and competency on council does not bode well for
management of multimillion dollar asset base. The parable of the elephant and
the blind men shows that the more things change - the more they stay the same.
2 comments:
We have to teach our children to think from a very early age. Along with all the 'good advice' we stuff them with from birth, we have to ask, 'and what do you think?' When we send them to school, we need to recommend good manners and reasonable compliance with "the rules" but say 'and don't believe it unless it makes sense to you' It's not much use expecting citizens to question and consider after a lifetime of compliance. We mustn't leave protest only to the 'mavericks'. Information is available but it seems too many people don't realise it must be considered - because they haven't realised democracy is up to them.
The problem now is that hardly anybody knows in any detail what councillors do.
I lived in a small town. The local paper and free weekly local both covered Council meetings. Most townspeople had some idea who councillors were and their stance on many issues.
I recently assembled from households a submission about the new zoning for an established street in Mt Albert. Despite many owner occupiers, and mostly senior professionals, only 2 of 23 had any reasonable idea that they were in the new 800 metre zone and how it can horrendeously affect them with 6 and more storeys close adjacent every boundary.
The main newspapers no longer report council meetings. Their coverage of issues such as the new zoning is late, very poorly presented, and incomplete.The (very erratically delivered) free paper and the also erratically delivered Our Auckland (the most obvious means of communication) provide even less info.
I have some idea of the merits of the two mayoral candidates . But most info gleaned from the recent reporter summaries in Herald. Few now bother with daily newspapers.
I am elderly and take more than average interest in Council affairs, but I have no idea of the stance of local councillor. Reporters expressing opinions of can only summarise observed performance of current Councillors, and this prone to a subjective element. Recent learning (from BV) that Labour members are sworn to support the party has greatly simplified choice, but how many know this?
The myriad local Board candidates an even greater mystery. I have only the faintest idea what the Boards do. I have attended a very few over the decades. I can imagine few things more utterly boring and time wasting.
Many of the candidate pen pictures share the same text. Can only judge from positions they have held; whether successful or not is unknown. Or vote on political party lines and /or race, as very many will.
Little wonder few are enthused.
In Auckland Collins will reap many votes on a purely race base. I wonder how many could explain any of his policy views (except free transport for marauding shoplifters, thugs and the homeless)
I am also concerned at the constant clamour to urge all and sundry to vote. Otherwise responsible persons seriously advocate for this. If persons are not genuinely interested and not reasonably informed cajoling them to vote makes a mockery of the system. Reduces it to a lottery or based on the semi random; appearance, dress, gender, race etc. Base instincts and prejudices swamp the few voters with a genuine understanding.
Council should be concentrating on keeping citizens advised, not attracting every random voter.
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