Welcome to the revamped www.danieljames.com.au

Welcome to my revamped site. I’ll be using this to share with you my thoughts and views on the world. I’ve streamlined the site trying to reduce much of the clutter and opining on subjects that don’t interest me.

Throughout the course of 2012 I’ll be using danieljames.com.au to update you on various projects I will be working on including the recording of a new album of my original compositions.

In the meantime there is plenty for you to hopefully keep you entertained.

All the best for 2012.

Daniel

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A Man of Vision. RIP Steve Jobs

The untimely passing of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has given many of us pause to reflect on what he has brought us all over the years. Today from the President of the United States to this lowly blogger, people are praising not so much the virtues of the man himself but what he created and how that in turn changed the world.

I make no comment on his personal life, his personality or his business practices.

I would sum up his legacy as the guy that brought rock ’n’ roll to computing and putting truly user friendly, personally empowering computing technology in the hands of millions. I can only speak for myself but one of the defining moments of my life was the day I got an iPod. I had resisted the iPod for months, I thought it was a gimmicky, overhyped device for people who weren’t ‘real’ music fans. So when I eventually got one and spent all night uploading my entire music collection to a device that could fit in my pocket I was gradually seduced by its simplicity, its design and the sheer awesomeness of being able to have my music collection with me wherever I am 24 hours a day for the rest of my life.

The iPod changed the way people listened to music, have access to music and the way we share music. In many ways it democratise music while at the same time smashing the business model of the music industry and providing artists with access to a world-wide audience at the click of a mouse.

Of course we’ve had many other revelations from the dream factory that is Apple since then and many have been just as compelling. The key to Apple’s rejuvenation that has made the company America’s largest, is that it understands the human form and what motivates people’s use of technology. It means that people young and old have access to the world at their fingertips. A world where people can connect and share with each other in ways that we could not have thought imaginable even a decade ago.

In the end  the mark of someone’s life is whether they left the world a better place than when they came into  it, in Steve Jobs case, we can resoundingly say yes, the world is a better place for having Steve Jobs around and it will be a little less exciting without him.

Rest in peace Steve Jobs.

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The Launch of The Simpleton

It is with much excitement that I can announce the impending launch of the new website – The Simpleton.

The Simpleton is a site for those of us who aren’t part of the journalistic, intellectual or political “elite” but still have something to say about the world. Written by articulate punters for you, The Simpleton aims to bring you a diverse range of news, humour and opinion from around the world.

The site will be launched in the next week. If you or you know someone who is passionate about writing and the world then please put a submission in to write for the Simpleton by clicking on the following link – http://www.thesimpleton.com.au/write-for-us

DJ


 

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The Politics of Hate

The debate sparked by Prime Minister Gillard’s proposed carbon tax and Emissions Trading Scheme, has generated a national political debate that has reached new lows in rhetoric, intimidation and vitriol.

The ugly protest yesterday, attended largely by right-wing middle-aged men and women from Sydney, on the lawn of Parliament House showed disturbing early signs of a Tea Party type movement in a country where the public has traditionally had a healthy yet laconic skepticism of politics and politicians.  Of course like any robust democracy such as Australia’s there will always be fringe elements at both ends of the political spectrum, which will be largely ignored by the general populace, and both major parties.

The union movement can’t plead innocence in its use of placards and colorful language during protests and political rallies. The 1996 storming of Parliament House early in the term of the Howard Government is one case in point.

The major difference with yesterday’s anti carbon tax rally and rallies of the past is that never have we seen a major political party embrace the type of sexist and hateful vitriol espoused by some more of the extreme elements of the rally.

Yesterday’s rally, which included One Nation founder, Pauline Hanson and members of the Australian League of Rights, the anti-Semitic movement that rails against an “extravaganza of Jewish power.”

Opposition Leader Tony Abbott and several of his Shadow Ministers addressed the rally standing in front of placards referring to the Prime Minister such as, “Ditch the Bitch”,  “Juliar Bob Brown’s Bitch”, “Ditch the Witch” also referring to the Ms Gillard as a “frump”.

Writing for the Sydney Morning Herald, the Prime Minister refused to back down on her carbon pricing stance, “I believe Australia must reject the extremes of this debate, no matter from where on the political spectrum they emerge. We see those who don’t believe in the science arguing the government shouldn’t act. They are vocal and they have some powerful friends who share their view. I don’t agree. I’ll be taking my science from the CSIRO, not the radio shock jocks.”

Indeed Radio personalities in Sydney, Melbourne and Sydney have been very vocal in their opposition to the carbon tax often personalizing issue with 2GB shock jock coining the term “Juliar”.

Mr Abbott while referring to some of the language used as “regrettable” has refused to distance himself from the protestors.

Whether the Opposition Leader and several members of his Shadow Ministry will come to regret their association with the rally is too early to say. However one cannot but help think that Mr Abbott was poorly advised in attending the event as the Government pushes ahead with it’s attacks on the Opposition by trying to paint them as “deniers” who are being captured by the extreme fringe of the debate.

The political fortunes of the major parties concerned are in many ways is by the by. What is of greater importance is the nature of the national political discourse. In one of my earlier blogs, “Political Vitriol” I lamented the state of American politics and the level of vitriol that many believe lead to the attempted assassination of Arizona Democrat, Representative Gabrielle Giffords. I added how relieved I was to live in democracy such as Australia’s which has a far less heated approach to national debate.

Perhaps I spoke too soon. In recent weeks the Prime Minister has been called a liar and has been likened to Libyan dictator Mamur Gaddafi. Independent MP Tony Windsor has received death threats for his links to the carbon tax proposal.

The call by Tony Abbott for a “people’s revolt” is fine rhetoric but when coupled with that hate spewed out on the countries radio waves and blogosphere is creating a divisive culture where the most vocal and extreme have a multitude of platforms to air their grievances.

Ultimately political culture becomes a question of political leadership. In this modern age of social media and the seeming abandonment of reporting for opinion by many media outlets means that heated political rhetoric can have many unforeseen ramifications.

 

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