Australia is one of the better places to be right now. Certainly, compared
to the US and much of Europe, we are sooooooo much better off. But it isn't
just the obvious things that have given us advantages, such as being an
island and having actual public health care. It's our history and culture,
especially as contrasted with that of the USA.
We've never had a war of independence or a civil war. Because we've never
had to rebel against a duly appointed government, we don't have a history of
having our trust in government betrayed. So we're less likely to assume that
the government is out to get us. Which means we're more likely to cooperate
when it's important to.
Mind you, we are a former penal colony. Which means we're very cynical
when it comes to politics. We don't adulate our representatives -- I get
the impression that US folks do, that if you've voted for someone, then they
can do no wrong in your eyes, and if you voted against someone, they are the
devil incarnate. Our politics are more evenhanded: we criticise everyone.
Australians are relentlessly egalitarian. Anybody who gets airs, who thinks
they are better than everyone else, they get cut down pretty quick. Known as
the "tall poppy syndrome". This also means that we have more respect for the
"quiet achiever" than for someone who boasts about their accomplishments.
There isn't quite so much worship-of-the-individual as you get in the US.
Part of that, I think, is that the kind of challenges we've had as a nation
have been better solved by cooperation than by macho action. Not to say
that the European invaders of Australia didn't massacre the First Nations
peoples here; we did, it's ugly, but it happened. But it isn't adulated in
our culture. The big challenge of the early colony wasn't conquering the
nations, it was the land itself. Yes, yes, we have jokes about the tons
of venomous creatures in Australia, but guess what? We don't have any large
predators. No bears, no mountain lions, just dingos (and they won't kill you
unless you're a helpless baby). Carrying a gun does not help you survive the
deathtrap that is the Australian bush. We aren't afraid of the land, no,
but we respect it. We take sensible precautions. If you go bushwalking, you
wear boots, you carry water, you tell people where you're going. If it is
fire season and you plan on travelling, you check the weather, you listen to
the radio, you pay attention to government directives, because if you don't,
you could die.
Fire season? Yeah, it's a thing. The fires in January 2020 may have made
international headlines, but it wasn't because they were bushfires, it was
because they were the worst in living memory. Summer is bushfire season. It
just is. And if it isn't fire, it's flood. If it isn't flood, it's drought.
Natural disasters, we have 'em. All... The... Bloody... Time. So we have
a lot of practice in dealing with them. You rally round, you help your
neighbours, you jolly well don't loot, and you never complain. Well, not
until afterwards, when you call for a Royal Commission to investigate
whether the government was negligent.
A global pandemic, well, that's just another natural disaster, innit?
Rationing? Yeah, well, you do that in drought time with water restrictions,
for the common good. Stay At Home orders? Bushfires, when it's not
feasible to evacuate. Isolation? Well, people get cut off by floods,
don't they?
We know how to deal with this stuff. It's just a slightly different flavour
of natural disaster, which happens to be affecting the entire country.
We've got this thing. We'll come out the other side. We'll be okay.
Australia is a great place to live. We just don't boast about it because
boasting is un-Australian. We already know that this is The Lucky
Country, why would we have to tell anyone?
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