“I probably feel a bit threatened, as so many people do. It’s a fact of life.”
— Tony Abbott, 2010
Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott is committed to the destruction of the man who replaced him, and is willing to use any issue (and adopt any position, no matter how hypocritical) to do it. But it’s also worth reflecting on his psychology and that of men (they’re mostly men) like him, given they are likely to play a continuing role in parliament until the Liberal and National parties decide to enter the 21st century and start resembling contemporary Australia a little more closely.
The psychological basis for climate change denial has attracted increasing academic study in recent years, as researchers try to work out why one particular demographic — older white males — tends to dominate the ranks of climate denialists (compare, say, vaccination denialism, which has a younger and more female demographic). A 2015 study that has drawn considerable attention identified that “denial is driven partly by dominant personality and low empathy, and partly by motivation to justify and promote existing social and human-nature hierarchies.” That is, climate denialists were partly motivated by concern that climate action would undermine existing hierarchies, which, as white males, they tended to dominate. And because they see the world in terms of hierarchies, the only alternative they can conceive of is a hierarchy in which they are not dominant.
As it turns out, this kind of fear — that one is being threatened with losing one’s dominant status — is applicable across a range of issues. While he later said he chose his words poorly, Abbott saying that he felt “threatened” by homosexuality accurately conveyed a similar sentiment: he sees LGBTI people as threatening — not, of course, to his physical self, but to his social status. He put it even better when he explained his “threatened” comments by saying homosexuality “challenges orthodox notions of the right order of things”, revealing how LGBTI people conflicted with his hierarchical, “right order” view of the world.
This deep-seated, hierarchy-based fear can also be seen in Abbott’s monarchism; he described any push for a republic as “the latest instalment in the green-left’s war on our way of life”. It even explains his bizarre claim, while Prime Minister, that he was a kind of fiscal fire brigade and the mere fact that he was in office was enough to address the fiscal emergency, just like the arrival of the fire brigade at a fire showed that everything was under control. This peculiar image only makes sense if you see the world as a hierarchy in which the restoration of the right people to the top of the hierarchy ensures all is well, no matter what action they might take, or even if they take no action at all.
Much has always been made of Abbott’s Catholicism, but it’s hard to see religion as playing a particular role in this worldview; Catholicism is no more hierarchical than Anglicanism, for example, or some other Christian sects. But through a prism of hierarchy, it becomes easier to understand why Abbott clings to the heterosexual, coal-fired, monarchical Australia he believes he grew up in, because that delivered him, as he sees it, to the top of the “right order of things” and anything that contradicts it must be fought as a kind of existential threat.
This is a key reason why Abbott is so adept at exploiting the politics of fear. All politicians traffic in fear, of course, but Abbott’s time in public life has been defined by it because his unparalleled genius has been to tear down or halt the achievements of others. From the republic to a carbon price and terrorism to, now, coal and marriage equality, Abbott uses fear and the belief that we are under threat to prevent change to the “right order of things”. He’s able to do so because he knows fear so well, because it’s not an artifice for him, but something he feels at the very core of his being. It’s a frightening world for Tony Abbott, and he wants you to be frightened, too.
I have always thought it was an attitude of “we’re in charge here & we will tell you when SSM, addressing climate change & a republic will be allowed”.
Tony Abbott’s irrational vendetta IS frightening and if he succeeds in prioritising coal-fired power over non-polluting sustainable energy technologies, the environmental and climatic consequences will indeed be frightening.
Pity the majority of us aren’t listening to his fear vendetta then. His black flips and sheer dishonesty when PM so discredited his brand of fear that he’s annulled his own brand.
Quite possibly an accurate analysis Bernard, but insufficient in my view – the man is simply a hate-filled nut-job for mine (but quite likely catholic dogma set the madness going inside his feeble brain).
So now for Tony, a man of faith, the only issue is to oppose the ALP, however he can. His life only has meaning by the measure of his opposition to things. It’s why the jihadis cause him so much concern. He recognises their psychology, and like all enemies, it’s their similarity which causes the most heartburn.
If spirituality can be defined by the absence of the self then there is nothing spiritual about Tony.
Its not only the ALP, don’t forget the “the green-left’s war on our way of life”
Yep, that one too. This is the Greens who bleed votes to the Liberals in surprising numbers. Abbott needs to be attacked with satire, nothing else. Rationality is lost on him, but derision is not. He might finally realise how much people hold him in contempt. The late, great Bob Ellis was brilliant in his Tabletalk blog. For about a year it was an almost daily, boisterous cackle.
Govt. Spokesperson: No! They met whilst out ‘taking the air’ and . . .
Prime Minister: We shook hands, and then as I raised my head . . . .
Ex Prime Minister: . . . . as he was raising his head, I just stepped up to shake his hand and . . . .
Leader of the Opposition: Would you describe this . . . as a terrorist incident? ZINGER!!
You are certainly correct about that “catholic dogma” setting it up. I have just finished reading, in my cafe’s Weekend Australian Magazine, about the next-gen conservative Andrew Hastie and in some ways it is more shocking that Abbott. Here are some of the highlights:
Curious how it is the loudest god-botherers (Morrison, Abbott, Abetz) who seem to have no compunction about torturing innocent refugees. And this from a bloke who admits to calling in a US bombing raid on “Taliban” while he was on duty in Afghanistan but then seeing the goat-herder children who were blown to bits “in error”. So, he now gets a second shot at inflicting his abuse of power on them!
In the recent media fracas over Benjamin Law’s tweet re homophobic elements in the Australian polity, many responded “Start with Hastie”.
And he loves our democracy so much that:
Does this personal philosophy come from deep thought and weighing the alternatives etc? Err, no.
So the reality is that his positions appear to be entirely from his upbringing (not to say inculcation–polite word for brainwashing) by his evangelical pastor father. After Scots College schooling (the Presbyterian version of Abbott’s Jesuit Riverside College), it wasn’t until he got to university until he met any other ideas:
At the same time he apparently claims he came to see the folly of the Afghanistan mission, he doesn’t seem to acknowledge in any way that the Left he so disdains was against it and Iraq from the beginning. And that his hero Howard was pushing known lies to justify invading Iraq–leading to another half million or so humans as collateral damage.
More on his democratic credentials:
Which, though he seems so gormless and lacking in reflection, simply means he intends to impose on the rest of us (notwithstanding any elections, plebiscites, surveys not to mention rational argument) his personal view of what is “good” though it turns out, it is something he has simply swallowed whole from birth, apparently not questioning a single bit of the toxic fantasy.
The throwback that shambled from judging “Bernie Banton’s heart” to winning an election, then justifying breaking promises made (to sway voters – the safety of ABC/SBS funding, Gonski) before that election as “We are going to keep the promise that we actually made, not the promise that some people thought that we made or the promise that some people might have liked us to make.”?
And you want us to go inside that mind???
We’re all going to need a long shower.
“Leapfrog with the Abbott”? ….. Make sure your shots are up to date.
Now perhaps an examination of of how a psychopathic loser like Turnbull thinks.
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