12 Jun2020

If separatism is such misery, do we try integration?

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

If separatism is such misery, do we try integration?

That indigenous Australians, who make up 3 per cent of this country’s population, account for 30 per cent of its prisoners is a national disgrace. That by the time they reach the age of 23, 75 per cent of young indigenous people in NSW will have been cautioned by police, referred to a youth justice conference or convicted of an offence in a criminal court — compared with just 17 per cent of their non-indigenous counterparts — makes the disgrace all the more searing.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

05 Jun2020

Racial politics — it has always been a riot in the US

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With America’s cities descending into lawlessness, it would be easy to conclude that the country is on the verge of collapse. In reality, the problems gripping the US are both more enduring and less apocalyptic than that impression suggests.

Click or tap here to access the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to access a pdf.

29 May2020

University ignores lessons of the past

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

 

Fifty years ago this month, 200,000 people marched through Australia’s cities in the first ­Vietnam moratorium. The period leading up to the demonstrations had been tumultuous on campuses across the country, including at the University of Queensland. ­Already by 1967, opposition to conscription had merged there with protests against the state ­government’s restrictions on civil liberties, unleashing an escalating tide of agitation.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

22 May2020

China ties: History shows trade can lead to servitude

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With China’s trade war against Australia escalating, the scene seems distressingly contemporary: a fraying global order, riven by mounting tensions between states; an ascendant, brutally authoritarian power, determined to throw its weight around; and dependent economies which, though formally independent, find their room for manoeuvre increasingly compromised as the rising power uses its economic clout to punish them for stepping out of line.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

08 May2020

Coronavirus: Australia is fortunate Abbott took action years ago

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

“No one could have foreseen five or 10 years ago the situation we face,” Emmanuel Macron declared in early March, as he sought to explain the shortages of personal protective equipment and respirators that had plunged France into a devastating crisis.


Click here to read the oped at The Australian's subscriber website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

01 May2020

Coronavirus: Australia’s tough fight to defeat ‘the louse’

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian


In December 1919, as the Bolsheviks struggled with a typhus epidemic that killed more than five million people, Lenin famously declared “either socialism will defeat the louse or the louse will defeat socialism”.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

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