The Forum > Article Comments > 'Sorry seems to be an easier word': the politics of apology > Comments
'Sorry seems to be an easier word': the politics of apology : Comments
By Andy Mycock, published 4/12/2009Kevin Rudd’s apology to the 'Forgotten Australians' raised some interesting questions concerning the legacy of the British Empire.
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What a lot of useless, negative and meaningless rubbish!
Politicians should be tidying up their own games in the here and now rather than pontificating on the past, which most of them know little about, and apologising for things that are none of their damn business. Judging what people did or didn’t do in past ages, particularly when the same things were thought and done by all the forebears of modern populations is stupidly ignorant to say the least.
How about some apologies from present day politicians for Vietnam, Iraq, Rawanda. Afghanistan, and a few other incidents like Rudd’s blatant tax proposal under the dishonest guise of helping the climate.
Apologies from politicians who actually make mistakes and apologise in their own lifetimes to the people they wronged would gain them more respect than apologising for somebody else’s mistakes or actions made in a different era altogether.
Rudd and Brown are tarred with the same brush; but our concern is Rudd, who is a master of using meaningless and insincere claptrap to take gullible Australians' eyes of the real problem for our country – Rudd himself.