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This is an archive of past discussions about John Howard. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 | Archive 4 | Archive 5 | Archive 6 | → | Archive 10 |
"A talk given on 20 February 2006 by Clive Hamilton, the director of the Australia Institute, described the Howard as being influenced by the "dirty dozen", a group of climate change skeptics with considerable influence over Australian policy [43]"
This is the John Howard entry, not the Clive Hamilton entry. His opinion shouldn't be sited on this page any more than any other individual. It is not relevent. This should be deleted and placed perhaps on the Clive Hamilton page. Mish 130 13:50, 22 February 2007 (UTC).
An editor added a direct quote, with Howard apparently saying, "interest rates would remain lower under a Coalition government". I haven't made an exhaustive search, but I can't find a source for this exact wording, which seems rather misleading. Howard's pledge was that the Coalition would keep rates lower than the ALP would, not that rates would become lower. --Pete 08:50, 14 January 2007 (UTC)
Glad to see that an accurate quote was found. However, it needs the context of a comparison with Labor, otherwise a reader might think that interest rates were promised to be lower (i.e. go down) under a Coalition government. --Jumbo 00:09, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
Whether you're a fan of Howard or not, you cant deny that he's been somewhat decisive - any proof, sources, evidence?
It seems I'm not the only one who doesn't find this article very neutral... Lots of it is against Howard, and a significant portion of it is for him. Now, I'm afraid this may sound neutral, as it "evens out", but that doesn't constitute a NPoV. Sid 15:46, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
This article is far from neutral. The entire article looks like it was written by the media arm of the Liberal Party. There a lot of misinformation and selective editing of facts. This is not Encyclopedic content - its Liberal Party propaganda. (I refer in particular to the last 2 sections). ozzy_marco 12 February 2007
There is a difference between disturbing the neutral point of view and only claiming facts. For example, the current revision states that the passengers aboard Tampa threw their children overboard to force the Navy to assist them when it was long ago established this was not the case. This would be an example of the Liberal Party propaganda. However, if you were to say that Howard claimed the children were thrown overboard then subsequently proven wrong, although this reflects poorly on Howard, it is merely the statement of fact and so can't be said to spoil a neutral point of view.Vision Insider 04:58, 10 March 2007 (UTC)
Im new to this, but NO children were ever claimed to be thrown overboard from the Tampa. So it would be exceptionaly wrong to say so, even more wrong to make a political point when trying to demonstrate a NPOV. Jampire1 05:15, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
The previous version read, "A major change in Howard's political fortunes occurred in August and September 2001, when the government refused permission for the Norwegian freighter MV Tampa..."
This is Original Research. Regardless of whether his polls improved (and the cite given doesn't give any details), we cannot say that this was a major change. We need to find an authoritative source who says this. A major change in John Howard's fortunes would be something like losing the 1987 election in the Joh-for-PM craze, or being elected Liberal leader again. Merely overcoming bad polls is hardly anything new for John Howard - he's always come from behind in mid-term to win the election. --Pete 11:12, 29 January 2007 (UTC)
Oh please. Look at all the poll history, Howard was elected in 1996 and since then his popularity kept sliding, eventually in 2001 to a very low rating and had almost no chance for re-election. Then the tampa happened and his popularity shot straight up - and since then, he's mastered the art and discovered the political value of scaremongering. Timeshift 12:02, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Question: user:Skyring's reversion of the birth date results in a broken info box for me:
[[{{{3}}}]] 26 July 1939 (age Expression error: Unrecognised punctuation character "[")
is this apparent to anyone else? The undertow 09:33, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
Australia actually led INTERFET (International Force East Timor) (ie didn't just contribute significantly) — The preceding unsigned comment was added by 58.169.6.144 (talk) 10:59, 31 January 2007 (UTC).
Anonymous user 58.169.6.144, by continously inserting references to the 96 billion debt in the "budget black hole" paragraph, is confusing two issues. The 96 billion net debt was common knowledge in 1996. But the "budget black hole" comments were in relation to an alleged (it's so long ago I can't remember who was right) 10 billion black hole in Labor's 95-96 budget. The Liberals used this as an excuse/rationale to cut certain spending (I think this was the famous "non-core promises"). I've no idea if the Libs were right, but it's a trick every incoming government seems to play: "Oooooh we've just discovered that the previous government has overspent, we'll have to dump some of our election promises". Now the $96 billion total debt was not in this category: it was common knowledge, so the Libs could account for it in their election promises. Now wiping out the $96 billion debt over 10 years is an impressive achievement and deserves a mention, but not in the same paragraph as the "budget black hole", because it's a separate issue. Rocksong 22:44, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
That should not be removed. It's in the context of the cuts. The cuts were not just because of the $10 billion deficit, it was because of the total debt. The government has spent years paying that off and aluding to it. Whilst the $10 billion deficit in spending was bad, it was the $96 billion that was the main problem that required addressing - and the main reason for the cuts referenced. The cuts would not have been as large if it were only the $10 billion deficit with no further government debt. If the cuts are referenced in such detail in the following sentences / paragraph, the $96 billion reason should also be mentioned. Either place the $96 billion federal debt or remove the reference to the severe cuts afterwards.(my words" severe cuts) Mish_130 13:33, 22 February 2007 (UTC)
Just noting a spelling mistake in this paragraph... ..." years, the exception being the 2001-2002 financial year where a cash defecit of $1.3 Billion was recorded[8]..." Obviously, defecit should be deficit.Trioj85 10:13, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
I have removed this claim from the 2004 election campaign section. I don't think Family First's preference flows to the Liberals were decisive in the election at all, given the party's low primary vote. Is there a source on this? It goes without saying that the party's Senate seat has been pretty decisive, but that was not won by "Howard's social conservatism". Joestella 19:50, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
(Cross-posted from Talk:Barack Obama.)
Today, Australian Prime Minister John Howard unleashed a pretty scathing criticism of Senator Obama, including saying that "If I was running al-Qaeda in Iraq, I would put a circle around March 2008, and pray, as many times as possible, for a victory not only for Obama, but also for the Democrats" and "I think that would just encourage those who wanted to completely destabilise and destroy Iraq, and create chaos and victory for those terrorists, to hang on and hope for an Obama victory." Opposition leader Kevin Rudd's response can be found here.
This is an unusually partisan criticism from a foreign head of state, is it notable for inclusion? Italiavivi 17:56, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
Pete, to put it bluntly, you're coming across as too argumentative. After nationwide front-page headlines, the proposal for a televised debate, and two raucous debates in Parliament, it's pretty big news. I am flabbergasted by the interpretation you offer of Howard's comments, which appears to be:
What on Earth would Howard have to have done to make it a personal attack? Suggest that Obama had nothing constructive to contribute and invite him to go elsewhere?Slac speak up! 07:56, 14 February 2007 (UTC)
I'm still very confused on why his comments are not even mentioned in the John Howard article. How hard would it be to just add in a brief, objective statement? Most Americans probably had never heard of him until his comments about Obama. I understand supporters of Howard might want to play this incident down, but frankly it generated too much media attention not to be mentioned in the article. --CommonSense22 01:34, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
You should also mention that JWH completely twisted the actual content of Obama's speech - where Obama specifically stated that he was not speaking about a "precipitated" withdrawal of troops from Iraq. JHW deliberatley misrepresented what was said (something that Wikipedians should instinctively loathe, if they are dedicated to fairness, balance and accuracy). Further, JWH has made an art of protecting his political backside by learning how not to be advised by senior public servants and other ministerial staff.
It was pretty bewildering to hear John Howard say on Monday that any withdrawing of troops from Iraq would be a "victory for the terrorists", and even making a timetable for withdrawal would mean the terrorists win; followed up by his government saying that the British made a "wise decision" to withdraw troops from Iraq and make a timetable to withdraw the rest. Now after talking to Dick Cheney, he's saying that for Australia to withdraw troops from Iraq would embolden Iran, and that would be a catastrophe for everybody in the region "not just the Israelis". Well where did the "not just the Israelis" bit come from? Who was talking about the Israelis? And why would the withdrawal of Australian troops embolden the Iranians and cause a catastrophe, but the British troops leaving is still a "wise decision"? And how come Dick Cheney says it would be okay for Australian troops to withdraw from Iraq? How can the wisdom of various decisions change hour-to-hour depending on who's talking, and what they're talking about, when they are essentially the same decisions? Why was Howard slamming Barack Obama for saying the USA should withdraw from Iraq, but saying that the British withdrawing is such a great idea? The whole thing just gets more and more confusing.
You know, this is supposed to be an encyclopaedia. A place where students can go to get the facts. When I was a kid, I loved to browse through World Book, Encyclopaedia Brittanica and all the others. I could go look up something, some little piece of information, and hours would pass as I turned pages, followed cross references, stopped to look at a colourful picture and so on. Editing Wikipedia is probably, in my own small way, some sort of repayment on the debt I owe the folk who put together those big thick square books.
Wikipedia is a great resource. Although I take it with a grain of salt sometimes, it's my first stop for information and answers to questions. And you know what? It's even better than a printed book for browsing. Click in this and that and you follow a trail of serendipity, every journey unique.
So why the hell do we get editors whose only purpose in life seems to be to bastardise the whole thing, subverting decent, factual informative, interesting and even entertaining articles into political statements? Every edit they make is intended to twist the facts just a little bit into their preferred distortion. In this case, the idea is to make John Howard into some sort of stumbling, evil idiot. Downplay his successes, highlight his failures. I've no doubt that the same people doing this are also whitewashing Paul Keating and turning Gough Whitlam into a flawless alabaster saint. And other people are doing precisely the reverse. This sort of activity feeds off the growing success and reputation of Wikipedia, the product of an unprecedented co-operation by thousands of devoted editors, all committed to making a quality product. It's using the growing authority of Wikipedia to provide gravity and support to political statements of dubious merit.
I guess if the article eventually gets twisted and spun and wriggled and nibbled far enough, one little duck quack at a time, it will say "John Howard is the Antichrist" and schoolkids will read it and believe it, knowing if Wikipedia says it, it must be so.
The most recent antics are aimed at presenting young Howard's unsuccessful run at state parliament as some sort of ham-fisted loss of a safe Liberal seat. Drummoyne in the Sixties certainly wasn't blue-ribbon, it wasn't a Liberal seat and although it had returned some Liberal members in the past, it was now a solid Labor seat. In 1968, it hadn't been held by the Liberals for six years, and in 2007, nearly 40 years on, it still hasn't been regained by the Liberals.
I regard this sort of manipulation of a factual article to be vandalism. Worse than vandalism, worse than some schoolkid finding that they can say of a classmate "Bugsy Jones is a poopy-head". It's subverting the wikidream, and I won't tolerate it, regardless of which side of politics is the supposed benificary, and who is the target. Let's stick with the facts, make sure that we are on solid, sourced ground, and do our best to write a good article. I suggest that if you want to nibble an article to death, you discuss your amendment in the talk pages, rather than engage in an edit war. --Pete 02:14, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Here here. I firmly agree with your post Pete. --Davo100 01:45, 14 May 2007 (UTC)
The seat of Drummoyne had been in non-Labor hands for most of its history prior to Coady. It is disingenuous of people to suggest that it was a Labor seat in 1967 - it was marginal at the time which was why the well connected party yoof apparatchik got himself preselected. The so-called Liberal Party of Australia is the direct descendant of the equally tory United Australia Party. Albatross2147 01:16, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
Believe it or not but Barnett (a Howard mate) quotes Howard's best man as having expressed surprise at his marrage. I had cited the reference and it is easily checked. You should be able to do this. Most public libraries will have a copy of Barnett's turgid panegyric. I got mine for nothing at Vinnies 'cos I had made a donation. The guy who previously had owned it hadn't read it but you can tell he was a fan 'cos he had left lots of neatly clipped fawning press cuttings from the Tele about John Howard (and John Brogden) in the book. Albatross2147 11:03, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
under the section 'fourth term' it says that the act same sex union legislation undermined the marriage act (for which there is no reference and it did not). therefore i request that an account holder edit the information to this extent
I had found that reference as well. The following exchange occurs in it:
Gerald Tooth: You attended Canterbury Boys High between 1952 and 1956. It's a rugby school. Did you play? John Howard: Yes I did, it was a rugby school, I played rugby league internally. I played for the second 15 Canterbury Boys High School second 15.
Mr Howard states that he played "internally" (i.e., against other boys from his own school). This clearly indicates that he did NOT "represent" or "play for" his school. I can find no reference in which he or anyone else claims this. Therefore, this claim should be removed, unless specific information to the contrary can be found and cited. AussieBoy 05:52, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
I am happy to be proven wrong. I also apologize for my loss of equilibrium, although I note that what I said regarding patterns of behavior is true (IMHO, of course). I do not normally overreact unless provoked, and in that context, I note that that I have found prior breaches of WP:NPA upsetting. Again, my apologies. AussieBoy 01:15, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
Well said! There's nothing I like more than to have someone show me a mistake, suitably backed up with good references. I'm certainly not immune from dropping the most outrageous clangers from time to time, usually when I don't do my homework properly. However, I suggest that in making comments about my personality, you don't have the full story, and making threats based on your incorrect understanding doesn't do much more than amuse me and egg me on. --Pete 01:43, 17 March 2007 (UTC)
In his time his popularity has been seemingly undented. His approval rating, though showing slight ups and downs, remain steadily above 50%. Howard explains this through his frequently repeated quote, "My proof is in my record. This has seen Australia with low inflation, low interest rates, low unemployment, higher wages and a total elimination of government debt".[1] As a testament to the Howard government's economic credentials, Australian Treasurer Peter Costello was asked in June 2006 to be the special guest of the G8 Finance Minister's Summit in Saint Petersburg, Russia — though Australia is not part of the G8—to advise these nations on good governance and public finance.
Have removed the above - basically inaccurate in terms of popularity as measured by the leaders satisfaction /dissatisfaction rating. Statement by howard of his own success / performance is nothing more than a self serving statement. While contrary views could also be cited, the effect would be to bog down the article more than it already is. Quote about Costello going to G8 isn't sourced as to the assertion that the reason for this evidences the Howard government's credentials - and in any case better off going into Costello's page if its relevant. While one could add in all the vicissitudes of the opinion polls, I don't think this is particularly relevant over the longer term unless it has an impact at election time. --Hmette 06:12, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
I also removed a paragraph which I thought was pointless in an already long article. I meant to give a reason but I accidentally saved before filling in the edit summary. Rocksong 06:22, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
Looks like a sensible edit to me. Danger with these articles is that they get very long and include matters that are ultimately of limited relevance. --Hmette 06:51, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
I have observed your revisions on a number of occasions now both on my contributions and others. This page and others are not your personal domain, and I suggest you stop treating them as such. In the process stop abusing others who make changes that you dont agree with. My edit removed a quote from howard about himself, and moved an event that related to 2006 to its proper place in the article. At the same time, it added references and improved accuracy. The changes are in my view resonable. Your actions in simply reverting changes it extremely ofputting, and one of the reasons many people feel they canont contribute to such pages, or canot be bothered to. A repeat performance will result in my making a complaint on the issue. --Hmette 06:31, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
The removal of the size of the debt should probably go back in, and was an inadvertent edit. As to the nature of the debt, I think its important to clarify what it is we're talking about. Placing it out of context means that there is no reference to what other factors go towards economic management. Net worth is simply a calculation of the government's assets minus liabilities as opposed to net financial debt. What bothers me is simply constantly reverting edits. If his problem is with content, there are far more constructive ways of dealing with it. As for the last revert which removes reference to a new opposition leader, clearly this is a relevant matter to include. --Hmette 07:49, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
You're right in the assessment that it's a political non-term in the sense of not being used in debate. I used the terms simply because it appeared in the budget papers, and not simply the 10sec sound grab from the opposition, which use the foreign debt levels as the principle counter argument. There are also a number of sources that cite drops in infrastructure as being a consequence of simply running a cash surplus. An article that explains the underling economics: The problem with economics is that many terms are used to describe related themes. I guess the concept is that yes we no longer have all this debt, but we also don't have all these assets generating income either. Ultimately government debt is just one measure of a highly complex budgetary arrangement. If it is placed in isolation it creates a misleading impression. —Preceding unsigned comment added by [[User:{{{1}}}|{{{1}}}]] ([[User talk:{{{1}}}|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/{{{1}}}|contribs]])
This is a biography of the Prime Minister, not an economic text, so we're essentially going to be limited to widely-understood "sound-bites". If you can't explain something, perhaps the answer is to let others refine it, rather than delete it out of frustration.
Removal of the material beginning "Prudent economic management remained the government's strongest claim throughout its term, and a prolonged period of economic growth remains an essential element in its popularity" looks to me to verge on vandalism. It is backed up by the CIA Factbook reference, and it's really just a statement of fact. Sound economic performance marks Australia over the past decade and (of course) John Howard claims the credit for this.
My beef is not really with the content, though I side with Rocksong as to keeping the material. Repeated removal of the paragraph without consensus is vandalism, as well as a serious breach of wikiquette.
Inserting material about Kevin Rudd isn't quite so controversial, though the edit looks to be unsourced commentary beyond the bald facts. I think with Kevin Rudd the real story lies in the polling figures - John Howard has been behind in the polls before, but not to this extent, and in an election year it is especially relevant. --Pete 09:02, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
I note that you've now reverted edits a third time. On this occasion it includes material that you admit is uncontroversial, on top of edits made to address the only constructive criticism that has been made. Rather than making up your own rules about "gaining consensus" I think you should have a read over the rules relating to reverting material including:
* Reverting is a decision which should be taken seriously. * Reverting is used primarily for fighting vandalism, or anything very similar to the effects of vandalism. * If you are not sure whether a revert is appropriate, discuss it first rather than immediately reverting or deleting it. * If you feel the edit is unsatisfactory, improve it rather than simply reverting or deleting it.
Not to mention the 3RR itself. I am simply trying to re-order a page that is currently in a poor state. I note that the 4th term part seems to stop at about Feb 2006 - over 12 months ago. Removing material that is attempting to get it moving is not a constructive way of going about things either. --Hmette 09:19, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
I don't say that your additions are uncontroversial. In fact I have just highlighted a major problem with the Kevin Rudd reference, in that it is essentially your own unsourced opinion. It looks to me like you are gaming the system by blanking a paragraph without consensus and then making subsequent minor additions, perhaps hoping that the vandalism will go unnoticed. We can always talk about the small additions later on, but for now the major problem is your continued blanking of material. It is standard wikiprocedure to discuss controversial changes rather than engage in edit-warring. Gain consensus on the discussion page first and then everyone will abide by the result and we won't have any problems. Wikipedia is a large, co-operative community and it works best when we follow established procedures. --Pete 09:33, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
Accusations of vandalism shouldn't be made lightly. As I indicated earler, I sought to move information that related to 2006 to the relevant paragraph and improve accuracy. While you may have all sorts of conspiracy theories about vandalism you should probably base that on some actual facts. As for allegations that I am some sort of "vandal fighter" you should probably find some sort of basis to back that up. I don't spend all day every day editing Wiki, infact, I stoped doing it in any significant way for quite some time because I was more occupied with other things. Quite frequently I ignore political pages, which although interesting are notoriously frustrating to edit in any meaningful way because some people have nothing better to do than to revert any changes. My intention with this edit was to move the factual material to its proper place in time and remove the following line: "Prudent economic management remained the government's strongest claim throughout its term, and a prolonged period of economic growth remains an essential element in its popularity" which is actually unsourced, and does not contain any reliable factual material. While there is a link to the CIA factbook this currently states: "Conservative fiscal policies have kept Australia's budget in surplus since 2002." There is no reference to prudent economic management. To some Keynsian economists, "conservative fiscal policies" are actually a bad thing. The government's claims that it was a "prudent economic manager" title doesn't mean its an objective fact either. The previous government claimed similar things, and I'm sure the next one will too. On the subject of edits, I usually take the approach with edits of making small changes rather than large ones. I feel this is preferable to not contributing at all. While you may well be offended by any sort of deletion, there is no policy against deleting material. The fact that Wiki is a metaphorical blank space, doesn't mean it should be filled with all manner of views that are ultimately subjective in nature. Where these take up large chunks of an article, their deletion does not constitute vandalism. Re: Kevin Rudd - I don't think its just my opinion that he's now the leader of the opposition, and I don't think I'm making up the fact that he's Howards first opponent who was not in parliament at the time Howard was elected. On your rational of "blanking" our deletion of these sections was itself vandalism. Perhaps in future you could pay other users a little more respect rather than instantly assuming they are vandals. --Hmette 13:24, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
I never said you were a vandal fighter. The pattern of your behaviour is one familiar to anyone who has spent time battling the more insidious pests. Looking at your overall contributions, I think it is fair to say that you have a certain political agenda - one that makes all your contributions to political articles worthy of examination on the grounds of bias. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but I rather tend to think that your first priority in life might be more the destruction of John Howard than the production of a better encyclopaedia.
As for Kevin Rudd, I have no complaints about either of the points you mention above. But looking at this diff, I cannot say that the second sentence of your contribution is of much encyclopaedic value: "On Monday 4 December 2006 Kevin Rudd replaced Kim Beazley as leader of the opposition. This event changed the dynamic of the contest between the Howard government and the opposition." I think that the best that can be said for it is that you gave "Howard" an initial capital, something you seem to find difficult in edit summaries and discussion. --Pete 16:47, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
Rather than acting like some self appointed guardian of all pages you contribute to, maybe its time you stepped back a little and let others respond to changes. Your actions in repeatedly reverting pages almost as soon as changes are made are the actions of someone who has an obsession. Typically edits aren't perfect first time around - that's why when you see one that you take issue with, you should edit that, rather than just reverting it. I'm not the only user who finds your approach offensive. Obviously someone in the past has been offended enough to have you banned. Maybe now is the time to look in the mirror and find a way of contributing so as to not irritate other people. --Hmette 23:46, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
If you don't have any relevant response to make to the points already raised, then please don't fill up the space here with personal rants. We don't have to like each other, but surely we can work together to improve Wikipedia. As for obsessions, you'd best get used to it. Try to think how you'd like to be treated. There are a lot of obsessive folk here, and for my part, I wish that I had found ways to handle them earlier on. May I suggest that open hostility is not the best path to wikijoy? --Pete 19:17, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
I've heard many times in the past that Howard lived at home until he was in his 30s and only moved out when he married Janette, can anyone verify this with a source? Also I've heard many times in the past that his mother negotiated his first wage when he left uni, again can anyone verify this with a source? Alans1977 19:56, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
While this material could be better phrased, simply removing it is blatant editing for political purposes. These two issues are live issues and possibly explain the current situation in the polls. Rather than just deleting on mass they should be selectively updted. In light of your previous comments about "blanking" sections, this type of editing is grossly hypocritical at best. --Hmette 01:52, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
Someone (Hmette I think) observed that the article is a bit of a mess, and I agree. Particularly the sections on the 2001-2004 terms, and the current term, look like randomly added paragraphs. I'd like to propose dividing these sections into topical sub-sections rather than arranging them chronologically, on the basis that this is an encyclopedia article not a news page. For the current term, the material could be grouped under the sub-sections "Senate Majority", "Industrial 'Reforms'", "Asylum Seekers" (gone quiet now but it was big in 2005), "Iraq/Terrorism" (AWB would go there I guess), "Climate Change", (and the "Retirement" section could be moved there too). That would cover pretty well everything there, and make it read a whole lot better IMHO. Rocksong 11:34, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
One thing I've noticed a bit of in these two sections is quite a bit of speculation. Lines like "... may have helped him to retain the "battler" vote which, combined with his strong conservative base .." or " ... and contributed to a recovery by the government in the opinion polls", which may be true, however this does not seem to be encyclopedic to me at all. Another thing I've noticed is usage of language which is suggestive of achievements Howard has made, achievements which may not necessarily be attributed to him. For example, "... and the Australian economy remained strong, Howard retained a clear political advantage over his opponents" or "The strength of the Australian economy under Howard's leadership ...". While these sections may not right out credit Howard for the supposedly strong Australian economy, they certainly elude to that. Again to me this has no place in a encyclopia, especially as this is a matter of contention between various opinions (i.e. Howard is to credit for our current economic state V The Keating reforms are to credit for our current economic state V Government can do very little to influence an economy, this is far more influenced by world financial and trade markets). In some ways I thing these 1998 - 2001, 2001 - 2004 sort of sections should go altogether, as perhaps they are condusive to speculation and political point scoring. Perhaps it would be far better to talk about specific events in a factual manner, rather than trying to lay out some sort of a narrative. Just my opinion Alans1977 23:09, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
An editor keeps trying to insert the POV phrase "attempted to sully" instead of "attacked" in reference to Mark Latham. Beside the fact it is a stupid phrase it pushes the POV that Howard was being dishonest in the criticism. It also assumes Lathams record was not already "sullied" something else that is POV.Prester John 23:57, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
Former PM Keating referred to Howard as a "desiccated cocomnut". Although this is trivial info, where could it be placed in the article? In a new "criticisms" section? 58.108.229.246 08:32, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
I cant see any relevance of the comment in relation to the article. Ive tried but it aint there. Perhaps it could be used in the Keating page to show both his quick wit and sour grapes.Jampire1 05:23, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
The other weekend whilst celebrating the 75th birthday of the Sydney Habour Bridge, with the other 200,000 people lucky enough to get a place walking over the bridge. Whilst walking I overheard some older gentleman discussing Francis de Groot and the New Guard. Whilst I knew they opposed Premier Lang's leftist policies, the ever emerging Red Peril, and numerous other things. I was rather interested to hear the Lyall Howard was a New Guard member. Is there any truth to this statement? --203.129.38.228 07:40, 27 March 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia has tons of "lists" as articles. Why not have a list of all the incidents that a politician tried to politicize terrorism by saying "the terrorists want him to win".... we all know it would be quite a substantial list, and it would help educate people on these political techniques (for better or worse, NPOV right?) by providing a comprehensive collection of such incidents in the political arena. Needless to say, Howard's comments about Obama would qualify for inclusion in such a list.
Last year I edited this article and posted the following (in Archive 3):
I changed "The Senate blocked or delayed much of the Government's legislation" to "The Senate blocked or delayed much of the Government's more controversial legislation". Before the Government gained control of the Senate Labor and the minor parties only rejected just over 2% of proposed bills.
This seemed the most minimum edit possible to correct the factual inaccuracy without detracting from the point being made (whatever the motivations for making it - in reality I have issues with the wording too, which makes it sound as though the Senate is an annoying hindrance rather than one of the two elected Houses of Parliament). Some time since then my edit was deleted, with no explanation on the talk page that I can find. I've reverted it and if anyone disagrees please post here before editing the article. Daniel 16:57, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
Maybe you should be asking yourself if the quote belongs in the Australian Senate article, or in some other Australian political/legislative article. Is it really neccessary for the John Howard Biography? Prester John 03:42, 12 April 2007 (UTC)
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