Maxim Report: Terrorism, Australia, Children
Real Issues No. 275 - Terrorism, Australia,
Children
Maxim Institute - real issues - No. 275
18
October 2007
www.maxim.org.nz
Terror's
threat
Howard's way for Australia?
Worryingly anxious
children
IN THE NEWS
NCEA put to the test
Law
Commission's
TERROR'S THREAT
The arrest of seventeen
people in police raids on alleged 'training camps'
has
caused a media storm involving 'activists,' 'weapons
training camps,'
'napalm,' 'firearms charges,' the
Terrorism Suppression Act and general
muddle, as we all
try to work out what exactly the facts are, and what
on
earth is going on in the depths of the bush.
Whether or not the 'activists' in this particular case
were a real threat,
over-enthusiastic survivalists, or
harmless youth workers doing their
knitting, the threat
could all too easily be real. It seems a good time
to
think again about the roots and bulwarks of the common
good, to remember
those things which hold us together in
the midst of threat, danger and
disagreement.
Human
society is made up of people held together by social glue,
and by
commonly accepted rules about how we will live
together. Most obviously
these rules are contained in the
rule of law to which we all ought to
submit, but also in
other voices whose authority we recognise. In a
healthy
society, we allow and encourage standing grounds
for disagreement and
dissent: trade unions, lobby groups,
churches, associations and even
families, can serve as
places from which to uphold values, speak our piece,
and
talk to the wider society about what is on our mind. This is
how a
healthy democracy works; it allows safety valves
for the expression of
dissent and frustration, and for a
process of public dialogue and moral
persuasion on the
basis of a commonly understood social ethic.
It is this
understanding of freedom, order and democratic government
which
is attacked by the threat of terror. Abandoning the
way we do things, and
the accepted ways of expressing
legitimate dissent in favour of violence is
thus not only
a threat to freedom, but to the very existence of
ordered
society itself. Whether or not there was a real
threat this time, we are
reminded that the safety and
security of our whole society depends not only
on the
Police, but also on the rest of us. We must work together to
build
and to foster a healthy body politic, with the
strong social bonds we
cannot afford to
neglect.
HOWARD'S WAY FOR AUSTRALIA?
John Howard has at
last announced that the Australian federal election
will
be on 24 November. On this day, Australians must
decide whether to return
Howard's Coalition Government to
office. Howard, who has been Prime
Minister since 1996,
faces opposition from a resurgent Australian Labor
Party
(ALP), and its leader, Kevin Rudd, promises to bring 'new
leadership'
to Australia. The closer Australia gets to
the election, the more that the
age-old philosophical
divide between the two main parties emerges, with
one
party offering hands-on 'national leadership' and the
other more
flexibility and freedom to the people.
Kevin Rudd's response to the announcement of the election
was to claim that
the current Government was out of touch
on issues like climate change,
healthcare and labour laws
which allow employers to negotiate more
flexible
contracts with workers. He is pledging that
under him the federal
government would expand its role,
with various national strategies and
programmes. Howard,
by contrast, proposes to lead the country in a way
which
gives incentives for people to work and prosper while also
promising
leadership that will foster the national good.
Howard, and Treasurer Peter
Costello, have announced a
wide-ranging set of tax cuts, which would
deliver around
A$20 (NZ$24) per week to a person on average earnings from
1
July 2008.
While the ALP is ahead in the polls by as
much as eighteen points, Howard
has history on his side.
Even Rudd has conceded that to win this election
means
his party will 'have to make history.' The ALP has only won
twice
from opposition since World War II and it is
generally unusual for
incumbent governments to lose when
the economy is in good shape, although
sometimes voters
simply tire of a government.
In New Zealand, with debate
revived during the last month about the role
of
government in delivering public services such as
education and healthcare,
the differences are also
becoming more apparent between the National
Party,
aspiring to become the Government, and the
incumbent Labour-led Government.
For voters in both
countries the sharper differentiation shows precisely
the
presuppositions which lie behind the rhetoric of each party:
either a
stronger hand for government, with either Labour
Party, but perhaps at the
expense of the freedom to
prosper on one's own terms, which is being
offered by the
Coalition and the National Party. But in Australia-no
matter
how one looks at it-both Howard and Rudd will need
to work hard to convince
voters that theirs is the best
way forward.
WORRYINGLY ANXIOUS CHILDREN
A report
released this week in the UK highlights some alarming trends
in
schools and communities. Community Soundings, a report
from the Primary
Review, has found a consensus across
various communities and schools that
children's
behaviour, their anxiety about the future and parents' lack
of
responsibility for their children need
attention.
The Primary Review is a broad project, based at
the University of
Cambridge, established to consider
primary education and related social
factors. It aims to
assess various factors within primary schools,
including
education and curriculum, culture, society and the
global
context, values and principles, parenting and
children's lives outside of
school. Community Soundings
is the first part of this review. The
information
contained in the report comes from interviews in nine
different
regions of England, with a total of 757 people,
including parents,
teachers, local authorities, police,
heads of schools and primary-aged
children.
According to the report, children are struggling to adapt
to a changing
culture, and have a high degree of anxiety
about social factors such as
gangs, weapons and street
violence, and international events such as
climate change
and global inequality. They also fear for their
personal
safety outside of school. The teachers
interviewed were concerned about the
pervasive and often
inappropriate influence of media and technology
on
children and increasing marital breakdown and family
instability. Teachers
and community representatives were
also concerned about parents failing to
teach basic
principles of good behaviour or mutual respect for others.
Many
teachers also felt children were growing up socially
isolated, both within
their families and across
generations.
With increasing social disconnection it is
hardly surprising that children
are feeling fearful and
isolated. The increasing importance of television
must
contribute to this directly by communicating to children a
picture of
threats in the world and indirectly by its
presence as a substitute for
family relationships.
Parents need to consider their levels of involvement
with
their children, alongside the impact of letting children
have
unfettered use of technology. The anxiety children
feel about the world
around them should remind us that we
are responsible for the way our
society develops. While
it would be easy to become pessimistic about the
report's
findings, the best response is to learn from them and act
early.
Read Community
Soundings
http://www.primaryreview.org.uk/Downloads/Int_Reps/1.Com_Sdg/Primary_Review_Community_Soundings_report_final.pdf
IN
THE NEWS
NCEA PUT TO THE TEST
The New Zealand Council
for Education Research released a report
yesterday,
showing that while 89 percent of school
principals and 60 percent of
teachers support NCEA, there
are 'high levels of uncertainty among
parents.' Taking
the pulse of NCEA, which analyses data gathered in
late
2006, suggests that parents and teachers who are
unhappy with NCEA are more
likely to be unhappy with
other aspects of the school as well, such as a
lack of
support for a teacher, or insufficient communication between
a
parent and the school. Rosemary Hipkins, author of the
report, suggests
that NCEA is being used as a 'lightning
rod' for a broader dissatisfaction
about secondary school
education, and in fact there was 'very little
desire'
amongst those interviewed to return to the previous
education
system.
Read Taking the pulse of NCEA
http://www.nzcer.org.nz/pdfs/15782.pdf
LAW COMMISSION'S NEW WORK PROGRAMME
The Law Commission has
released its work programme for next year. As well
as
completing existing work, the Commission will begin new
projects,
including reviews of the Misuse of Drugs Act,
the assault provisions of the
Crimes Act and 'the law
relating to private schools.' The Commission will
also
look at reforms to criminal procedure and 'reducing the
level and
impact of organised crime in New
Zealand.'
The Law Commission is an independent body 'which
reviews areas of the law
that need updating, reforming or
developing,' and makes recommendations to
Parliament. In
the process, it provides opportunities for interested
people
to make submissions on its work. The Commission
deals with important issues
that affect many New
Zealanders. Members of the public should take
advantage
of opportunities to make submissions when they arise.
Find
out more about the Law Commission, its projects and
opportunities to
make
submissions
http://www.lawcom.govt.nz
TALKING POINT
'Order without liberty and liberty without order are equally destructive.'
Theodore Roosevelt
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