August 17 – 23, 2019
News
Comment
Comment
Lidia Thorpe
Protecting the Djab Wurrung trees
“The cruel irony in this standoff for the protection of our cultural heritage is that it occurs against a backdrop of the Andrews Labor government’s current process to negotiate a treaty with Victoria’s First Nations. The way our concerns, elders and cultural values are being dismissed gives us no confidence they will undertake the current treaty negotiations with Traditional Owners in good faith.”
Comment
Stan Grant
Adam Goodes and writing a new Australia
“‘What would they know, what would they know, what would they bloody know, about being a blackfulla.’ It is a penetrating line in the documentary The Australian Dream. Gilbert McAdam – an Indigenous football hero – reminds us of an enduring truth in Australia. Too many white Australians just don’t know what it is to be Indigenous. Most Australians still admit they have never met an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person. What would they know about invasion, dispossession, stolen children, segregation? What would they know about the harsh realities of black lives in Australia?”
Comment
Paul Bongiorno
Press freedom and Hastie words on China
“Whoever chose the venue for the first day of the federal parliamentary inquiry into press freedom had a sense of humour. At least, it tickled the funny bones of journalists assigned to the story when they learnt the inquiry was to be held at the New South Wales Masonic Club in Castlereagh Street, Sydney. Famous for centuries as a secret society, that organisation is not so furtive these days, and the hope of Australia’s major media organisations and human rights campaigners is that our government and its agencies will follow suit.”
Letters, Poem & Editorial
Culture
Profile
Supergroup Seeker Lover Keeper
On their second album, Wild Seeds, Seeker Lover Keeper took a more collaborative approach to songwriting. While the process was challenging, it created a more cohesive record and deepened the three musicians’ friendship. “It’s a real relief when you can relax and lean into that,” says Sarah Blasko. “You don’t have to get everything right or have all the perfect ideas. It’s really nice to see each person take the song forward at a different moment and you can kind of rest in that.”
Books
Life
Puzzles
Quotes
RECRUITMENT
“Home Affairs officers will be placed in key overseas locations to seek out the very best people in high growth industries, and encourage them to come to Australia to help grow those industries.”
The immigration minister announces a new program to attract overseas talent to join Australia’s border protection agency.
RELIGION
“Personally, I’ll keep the seal.”
The Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne says he’d rather go to jail than break the seal of confession and report paedophile priests to the police.
AMERICA
“I honestly started it as a joke.”
The organiser of a petition to rename the road in front of Trump Tower “President Barack H. Obama Avenue” expresses surprise at her petition gathering 250,000 signatures in just days.
IRONY
“They should learn their place.”
The Australian, who lives in Guangdong, China, complains about Hong Kong protesters to CNN because his flight is delayed.
MEDIA
“In Australia today, journalism is being used as a cover by foreign intelligence actors.”
The ASIO deputy director-general tells a parliamentary inquiry into press freedom that exemptions for journalists could prove a slippery slope to protection for spies.
DIPLOMACY
“I just wonder whether Scott Morrison is going to be fully briefed to shove a sock down her throat.’’
The shock jock responds to New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s questioning of Australia’s climate change credentials at the Pacific Islands Forum with his trademark charm.