Final Thoughts for 2023
/So much has played out in 2023, and our challenge is now whether we learn from the horridness of this year, or whether we allow it to ingrain itself as the new norm.
Read MoreSo much has played out in 2023, and our challenge is now whether we learn from the horridness of this year, or whether we allow it to ingrain itself as the new norm.
Read MoreFor what it’s worth, a sample of some of my work during the referendum and beyond.
Read MoreI don’t know about that you, but 2022 seemed like the longest year of the pandemic. Time didn’t move along slowly, it grinded, it stuttered and seemed to wrestle with each of us as it saw fit. Leaving so many of us exhausted and bewildered as we tried to navigate the ‘new normal’, a place more menacing and tiring than all we knew before.
Read More262 days. That’s the chunk of us Melbournians lives that have been in lockdown over the past 20 or so months. It’s a long time. It’s long enough to rewire the brain of adults and wire the brains of children.
As we tiptoe back into a new normality, most of us recognise that things won’t be the same as they once were. When we get to the point when all borders are open, not a restriction in sight, COVID retreated into the population along with the common cold and the flu, things will still not be the same as they once were before.
Not because nature has changed, although it is constantly. The world will have transformed because we’ve changed. I don’t want to speak for other city’s and country’s experience, but I think I can talk on behalf of Melbournian’s and our collective experience.
It’s been hard. It’s been very difficult.
One of the greatest difficulties has been the politicking around what is a public health crisis.
Most of the undermining of key health messaging hasn’t been done out of driving a nuanced discussion about what measures should or should not be in place, there’s always a room and a need for that. No, the politicking has been driven by the same old tiresome point scoring, the one upmanship typical of our national debates that was merely just boring before the pandemic came.
Within the confines of the pandemic, the political nitpicking by politicians, business leaders, C-grade celebrities and ‘influencers’ has not only been damaging to public health messaging, it has damaged people’s sense of wellbeing, their mental health. At a time when job losses, business failures and the risk of severe illness was enough to make people feel lousy.
Victoria copped the brunt of this opportunism. It made life harder. The incompetent bungling of the vaccine rollout and the political blame shifting made things worse. Yet will still persisted to keep an eye out for one another. On the street, in our parks and in our markets.
I for one, am very much looking forward to things opening back up. To do things we haven’t been able to do and to see the people we haven’t been able to see. But despite how terrible being in lockdown for 263 days has been, there is a part of me that will miss part of the collective resilience and stoicism the vast majority of people have shown over the last 20 months.
Every night of lockdown, I looked across the harbour from where I live, and I can see seven or so apartment towers. Come night fall, the gentle glow from people’s homes would gradually light up the cold Melbourne gloom. Within that light, there was comfort.
A visual representation of the hundreds, maybe thousands of other people that were doing what I was doing. Staying home. Getting on with things, knowing that the sacrifices we were taking would hopefully pay dividends for us, our families and our community. It was crappy, it was boring but necessary. Much of the time we had no clue when it was going to end.
This is what our community did together. Under sufferance, but we did it. While we were doing it, cleaners, bus drivers, truck drivers supermarket workers and of course our healthcare professionals were diligently and quietly keeping us safe without fuss, without grandstanding.
It may be wishful thinking, but I hope we can retain a fraction of the community spirit and the sense of care for one another we developed over those 263 days and nights. It affirmed much of what I love about this place. The world may open up over coming months and I will go out into it. But I will always return to this town, because I know I will be surrounded by people that collectively have had a similar experience and that at the end of the day, we’ve demonstrated our care for each other.
Time to get on the beers.
The cloak of nationalism is indeed magical. It hides and projects all at once.
It projects the strength, unity and the sugar dusted way of life that so many would have us believe is the American or the Australian way, which so many would have as the American way. What the cloak of nationalism hides is inequity those that stand forgotten at the foot of capitalistic mountain ranges which are impossible to climb, unimaginable to traverse.
Read MoreWhile her husband was away on the battlefields of France, Gunaikurnai woman Lucy Pepper was fighting her own battles at home to keep her family together. This is her story as read by her great, great grandson.
Read MorePercy Pepper was on of 800 Aboriginal men that served their country doing the ‘Great War’. Every ANZAC Day we must remember them.
Read MoreKnowing we had a government that at least took climate change seriously. A government that wasn’t owned by a coal lobby determined to keep burning dead dinosaurs until there’s nothing left to burn. The community would take comfort knowing that on the world stage we as a nation had the moral authority to lead, to work with other nations, particularly the other industrialised nations responsible for two percent of emissions or less.
Read MoreThe long hot summer is over. But for Aboriginal people around the country the heat continues to linger.
Read MoreA few final thoughts on 2018 and what we can expect in 2019.
Read MoreThe true history of Australia, in all its’ bleakness, in all its inspiration, needs to be told. It benefits not only the first peoples of this land, it benefits us all.
Read MoreLet’s take some time out to think of the real victims of prejudice in this country. Hint, it is ins’t the people that run and own almost everything.
Read MoreWhile we bounce up and down on the jumping castle of outrage, a real travesty continues to unfold.
Read MoreWe are or soon will be living in a country that has a diminished national broadcaster, will be an international arms trader, have a real-time facial recognition database and new powers that allow police to stop and ask you for your papers every time you step foot in an airport (at this stage).
Read MoreIn recent years the ABC has come under constant attack by ideologues, almost exclusively on the right, that accuse it of being left leaning and biased towards the progressive side of politics.
Read MoreAlready this ANZAC day I have seen people on twitter making cheap shots just so as they can get a hit of dopamine. The fundamentalist toing and froing does us all a disservice. We are no longer in an environment where we can have reasoned discussion about whether we should commemorate the fallen in the frontier wars.
Read MoreWe were told to go away, in the spirit of self-determination, and come up with a proposal to forward the constitutional change agenda. Invited to participate, to work with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples from across the land to form a position, both leaders from our major political parties declined, didn’t want to impose themselves on the machinations of our important work.
Read MoreLast week we had the 9th annual Prime Minister’s Close the Gap report to parliament. The stark reality is that the close the gap policy agenda is failing.
Read MoreIs class a major issue in Australia? Unlike the “mother country” (England not America) where class is irrevocably needled into your forehead at birth, where you are a marvel of society if you’re dad was a chimney sweep and you’ve dusted the soot to ascend class and become a quiz show master.
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