On Australia day for the last few years, I have made a point of reflecting on the place we live.
The post on January 26 2012, called for a mature debate on the challenges we face as a nation, the real, long term issues, rather than the diet of puffery and bullshit we normally are asked to digest. Quaint idea that, asking for a national debate on real issues.
In 2013, I asked what it was we wanted the place to look like in another generation, and I guess some degree of pessimism came through the words, again nothing.
Last year, 2014, I focussed on what I thought would be the defining trend that would drive our decision making, individually and for the nation, Data, and the essential truths that data can convey. This turned out to be absolutely wrong, about as wrong as anyone can be, and is again a salient lesson to those with a crystal ball hidden somewhere. Small businesses have not embraced data, Governments continue to hide it, and politicians use it to distort, mislead, and often fabricate, and we still take it on the snout, in relatively good humour.
So much for the transparency to be delivered by the internet.
This year, 2015, I will not be so grandiose or presumptuous.
Nick Kyrgios has just fought his way into the Aussie Open semi-final comprehensively replacing Tomic the tank as our favourite tennis player, the Canberra shuffle is back in full swing, educating our kids seems to be on the hands of kids, the boom of the last few years is comprehensively over and the lack if intelligent and bi-partisan comment and policy development that would enable the economy to weather the coming storm is supplanted by another call from the opposition leader for a debate on the coming republic.
For heavens sake, can we be adult about this?
Australia is the greatest country in the world, our economy is for reasons of luck and good management 20 years ago in pretty good shape relatively, but we are still failing to recognise that the piper needs to be paid now if the prosperity we have enjoyed will be handed to our children, some farsighted decisions need to be made irrespective of the political cycle.
I guess I am asking too much, pass the bottle, please.
We do have a major challenge: “Almost half of Australia’s terrestrial ecosystems are threatened, 85 per cent of its rivers have been modified and twice as many Australians die from air pollution annually than road accidents, according to a report on the state of the country’s environment.” (Australian Conservation Foundation).