It’s been interesting reading the reactions to Kerry Packer’s memorial service:
“So how did we come to the conclusion that a life spent turning an inherited fortune into an astronomically bigger one is a life well lived? We didn’t. Rather, as Orwell showed in 1984, those who control the means of communication control the language itself, and can assert, and have a large enough number of people actually believe, that freedom is slavery, war is peace, or that a life spent gorging oneself, squandering amounts on blackjack tables that could help solve, say, the global malaria epidemic, avoiding one’s civic duties and speaking to everybody with barely concealed contempt, is a life of generosity and grace.

Beazley and Hawke are both Rhodes scholars. It’s more likely they know that their party now stands for nothing, and think it’s better to be present at the memorial service of a devout enemy of working people (despite Packer’s love of sport, pies and swear words), than risk offending the owners of a vast media conglomerate whose “opinions” hold more sway over elections than any well-formulated policy.
The memorial service was broadcast without advertisements. Thus viewers could experience, for once, what it is like to watch a program on Channel Nine for an hour without fools screaming at them for 15 minutes to buy things. The only people who protested against this disgraceful, taxpayer-funded event – four members of the noble Kerry Packer dis-memorial society – were arrested.” (Age)
I was amazed to read of the arrests. The BBC said: “Six people were arrested outside the Opera House, for protesting against the memorial service because it was funded by taxpayers’ money.” Arrested? Charged with what? Don’t they have the right to protest?
Sometimes it feels like the Australia I left five years ago was a completely different Australia.