Will this,finally,be the moment Australia stands up and says enough is enough when it comes to domestic violence?
The causal factors of violence against women and children are well known. Little is new other than cyberstalking and surveillance as tools of abuse. The long-standing problem of agencies competing for inadequate resources does not assist victims or aid in violence reduction. Executive government needs to undertake effective law reform and provide adequate funding for first-class services.
Explicit learning,or rote learning as it used to be known,definitely has its place but it doesn’t lend itself to every subject.
A royal commission is a good idea,but only if the government commits to implementing the recommendations. This needs to be a whole of community approach,not just whole of government.
Violence against women is under focus yet again – something that never seems to change.
If I have paid a high price for a ticket to an evening show,screaming children are not part of the deal. It’s not fair to the other members of the audience or the performers.
Curbing the corrosive effects of social media is not only about enforcing take-down orders but must extend to their other deleterious aspects.
The CSIRO/AEMO GenCost report has said for years,including during the time of Coalition governments,that wind and solar are the cheapest form of new energy for Australia,even when considering additional integration costs such as energy storage and transmission. Nothing has changed.
Surely religious prayer groups are not entitled to active supervision by our overworked public school teachers?
If only you’d have stopped and thought about it from someone else’s point of view. Isn’t that what art is meant to make us do?
In Gwandalan,we have a plethora of unlicensed underage riders,often without helmets,riding noisy,unregistered two-wheeled machines,who even ride at speed on one wheel through the shopping area.