Make Australia Great Again!

It’s not hard to make the argument that on many fronts Australia has regressed in recent years. Our standard of living in real terms has diminished over the term of the Albanese government. Whilst our GDP, masked by record migration might have increased, our percapita GDP has fallen. We have endured high levels of inflation […]

Continue Reading

Breaking Through the Woke Barrier

Pierre Bourdieu was a French sociologist. In his 1979 book Distinction, Bourdieu introduced the concept of symbolic capital. In contrast with more conventional notions of resources, such as wealth and material assets, Bourdieu argued that symbolic capital is the resource available to an individual on the basis of prestige, celebrity status and public recognition. A […]

Continue Reading

The Palestine Dilemma

On 7 October 2023, Hamas terrorists emerged from Gaza to commit an horrendous atrocity against Israeli civilians. This deadly incursion has been well documented so I won’t elaborate on the gruesome details. Inevitably Israel responded with deadly force in order to deter further aggression and to rescue the civilian hostages that Hamas had kidnapped during […]

Continue Reading

The Downside of a University Education

At the age of eighteen, I left my family home in Charters Towers to start an engineering degree at James Cook University (JCU) in Townsville. In those days it was quite an extraordinary thing to do! In my high school years I can only remember two students in the cohort that I knew ahead of […]

Continue Reading

Coming Out Better and Not Bitter


This week’s essay contains some sentiments that are closely related to what I wrote last week. It is stimulated by something the good Dr Phil has taught me. He tells me that when we experience trauma we should make sure we “come out better and not bitter.” Whilst this is wise advice it is somewhat […]

September 4, 2011

Do We Have To Be Victims?


Many of those I speak to decry the fact that in modern society everyone seems to be a victim. No matter how dysfunctional our behaviour we are seemingly excused by our circumstances. Sure there are people living in difficult circumstances and this has an impact on their behaviour, but we now seem to believe that […]

August 27, 2011

Learning to be Happy


Some years ago I was invited to be the guest speaker and to make presentations at a graduation ceremony at the Central Queensland University. When I commenced my address I stated that I had come to address a deficiency in the university’s curriculum. The Vice-Chancellor seemed a little startled at this suggestion and there were […]

August 21, 2011

Maintaining Our Social Capital


Well, what a week it’s been – riots in London, the USA losing its AAA rating, financial crisis in the Eurozone and our own share market taking another plunge and then recovering. What has gone wrong with our modern democratic capitalist societies? To begin with, I suppose, one of the downsides of democracies is that […]

August 14, 2011

Towards More Informed Public Debate


Our society seems increasingly permeated by polarising issues. Issues such as climate change (and subsequently the carbon tax), the issue of refugees arriving by boats, the government intervention into remote indigenous communities, the threat of terrorism (particularly by Muslim Jihadists) and so on seem to rapidly polarize our society making meaningful debate quite problematic. It […]

August 6, 2011

Terror of another Kind


I felt compelled to write about the tragedy in Norway this week, but I scarcely know where to begin. In the face of such a repugnant act I am left bewildered and struggle to make sense of it. Norway is a socially progressive country with one of the highest standards of living in the world. […]

July 31, 2011

When Will They Ever Learn?


I remember in the sixties hearing Pete Seeger singing his composition “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?”  All five verses of the song finished with the plaintive question; “When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn?” It is a very good question. In this essay I want to explore learning in an organizational […]

July 24, 2011

Flies in the Ointment – A Parable for Our Times


“All the efforts of the human mind cannot exhaust the essence of a single fly.” Thomas Aquinas In far off Moladavia there was a village called Climatesan. Now Moladavia was a poor country and most of its citizens struggled in a subsistence economy. But Climatesan was more fortunate than most. Whereas most of the land […]

July 17, 2011

Spiritual Evolution and The Perennial Philosophy


Eventually all of us have to contend with the question, “Does God exist?” and if we answer in the affirmative we then have to ask ourselves, “What is the Nature of God.” Let me confess at the very beginning of this essay that I believe that God exists, or at least my interpretation of a […]

July 9, 2011

Watching The Play


In “As You Like It” William Shakespeare wrote the famous lines: “All the world’s a stage, And all the men and women merely players: They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts…” We all have multiple roles. We can at any time be for example, a father, […]

July 3, 2011