Unions, Environmental movements and Semi-anarchist movements.
Why?
Unions - Well, this may have more to do with the new IR laws in Australia, but I have a very deep disdain for unions now. They whine, they bitch, they moan unless everything is 110% in their favour. They are utterly tunnel-visioned and will not open up to the slightest counterargument (AFAICT). They blast their opponents for using the politics of fear, but the politics of fear is their one and only weapon. Note: this isn't talking about ALL unions. I mostly mean big union spokespeople - the ACTU in paticular (for Australians)
Environmentalists - Now, not all environmentalists fall under this category. There are many good and decent environmental organizations out there - WWF is OK, and the grassroots ones are good. But the big, international ones such as Greenpeace I dislike. They are prepared to do anything to get what they want. Like unions, they are utterly peverse to opposing arguments and the fail the grasp the idea of 'compromise' - that you can't have everything your own way. Oh, that and the fact that they seem to have the insane idea that because they are part of a movement, they are 'better' than everyone else. Oh no, you're using cars too much! But it's OK if we use cars every second of the day because WE'RE environmentalists!
Semi-anarchists - now these guys really get up my nerves. What I mean by this are the people who have the temerity to march straight into a G8 or G20 summit and scream bloody murder. I mean, seriously. Get a brain with some common sense - do you not understand that you cannot have everything your own way? These guys are the most tunnel-minded of the lot. These guys seem to have deleted 'compromise' from their dictionary altogether - they cannot understand the simple concept of 'unwanted-but-necessary'.
Now, I'm not talking about all of these people - merely the most vocal ones. And this may seem contradictory from my left-wing, "liberal" position, but I just had to get it out of my system.
Why?
Unions - Well, this may have more to do with the new IR laws in Australia, but I have a very deep disdain for unions now. They whine, they bitch, they moan unless everything is 110% in their favour. They are utterly tunnel-visioned and will not open up to the slightest counterargument (AFAICT). They blast their opponents for using the politics of fear, but the politics of fear is their one and only weapon. Note: this isn't talking about ALL unions. I mostly mean big union spokespeople - the ACTU in paticular (for Australians)
Environmentalists - Now, not all environmentalists fall under this category. There are many good and decent environmental organizations out there - WWF is OK, and the grassroots ones are good. But the big, international ones such as Greenpeace I dislike. They are prepared to do anything to get what they want. Like unions, they are utterly peverse to opposing arguments and the fail the grasp the idea of 'compromise' - that you can't have everything your own way. Oh, that and the fact that they seem to have the insane idea that because they are part of a movement, they are 'better' than everyone else. Oh no, you're using cars too much! But it's OK if we use cars every second of the day because WE'RE environmentalists!
Semi-anarchists - now these guys really get up my nerves. What I mean by this are the people who have the temerity to march straight into a G8 or G20 summit and scream bloody murder. I mean, seriously. Get a brain with some common sense - do you not understand that you cannot have everything your own way? These guys are the most tunnel-minded of the lot. These guys seem to have deleted 'compromise' from their dictionary altogether - they cannot understand the simple concept of 'unwanted-but-necessary'.
Now, I'm not talking about all of these people - merely the most vocal ones. And this may seem contradictory from my left-wing, "liberal" position, but I just had to get it out of my system.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
~ Richard Feynman