18 Jun2021

Scholarly light cast on Dark Emu claims

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian


If only Australians had been told the truth, claimed Bruce Pascoe, they would have known that Indigenous societies, as they existed before European settlement, were anything but primitive communities of “mere hunter-gatherers” whose “simple lot” was to “wander haplessly” across the continent’s length and breadth.

 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.

07 May2021

Censure the writer, but don’t censor art

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

On May 27, 1971, as the second attempt to ban Philip Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint failed miserably in the NSW Court of Quarter Sessions, literary censorship in Australia effectively came to an end.

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.

23 Apr2021

Victimhood casts shadow on the virtue of valour

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

This Sunday, on Anzac Day, we will remember those who gave their lives for this country, most recently in Afghanistan, and honour their bravery and devotion. Yet in a culture that places victimhood on a pedestal, the future of the values which shape that tradition of service seems increasingly uncertain.

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.

16 Apr2021

Australia Post turns drama into soap opera

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

On December 22, 1988, Ralph Willis, who had recently become minister for communications in the third Hawke government, met with George Maltby, the managing director of the Overseas Telecommunications Commission, and demanded his resignation.

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.

03 Apr2021

To be righteous is one thing, to be right another

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The Liberal staffers who videoed themselves masturbating in Parliament House are morons, not monsters. And if we gasp at Andrew Laming’s conduct, it is less because it was manifestly unethical than because it shows, all too clearly, that while you are only young once, you can be immature forever.

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 Mar2021

Public shaming can’t replace justice

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As extremely serious accusations proliferate about behaviour by senior politicians that is claimed to have occurred years or even decades ago, the greatest damage is likely to be to the cause of justice itself.

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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