It is Australia day down under.

A day we celebrate…… what?

The landing at Sydney Cove of the first fleet of convicts and their equally corrupted gaolers?,

The invasion that ended a way of life that had existed for how many thousands of years?

The beginning of the  vibrant successful multi-cultural community that is modern Australia, with all its faults and problems, still the best place on earth?

Depending on your perspective it can be any or all of the three.

The current debate about the meaning of Australia day is probably useful, but let’s focus on some facts rather than allowing it to be another example of our ability to bellow a personal view  at each other and treat it as a fact.

Mark Kenny’s insightful article advocates for May 9, for some very good reasons. It is the date Australia formally became a self-governing federation in 1901, the date the parliament formally shifted from Melbourne to Canberra in 1927, and the date in Bicentennial 1988 that the current parliament house was opened.

Oh joy, some facts and solid argument why the change should  be made, and for the first time I find myself agreeing.

However, perhaps we should also be considering some of the stuff that will make the future of our children a successful one, rather than squabbling about the trappings of position today.

  • How is Australia to compete in the modern world of digital everything without the industries based on original science? History suggests that commercialisation of this sort of research takes 30 years, way beyond the electoral cycle that seems to determine the funding. The choice of professor Michelle Simmons as Australian of the year is a wonderful choice. A scientist at the cutting edge of research into the stuff that will reshape our society, leading a great team, and, a woman in a mans world. That is how we will compete into the future. (thank heavens the Aussie of the year is not a sports star, again)
  • How is our education system going to accommodate the demands of a society radically different from the one that the teachers grew up in? The choice of Eddie Woo, a local maths teacher who has conquered teaching maths on line is inspired and well deserved, and I am sure his students will represent the new generation of contributors to Professor Simmons work.
  • How are our institutions, designed to accommodate the world of the 20th century going to evolve to give us the confidence and ability to continue to be a success in the 21st. Our governments and their politicians, churches, educational processes, and pretty much all others are on the nose, despite them being inhabited by a vast majority who work hard to do the right thing.
  • How are we going to retain the successful human melting pot we have been in the face of the apparently increasing levels of xenophobia domestically and the pressures externally to be more open and accepting of differences?

 

Enough of that, I am going to fire up the barbie and have a coldie, or two. Isn’t that what Australia Day really is, a day to kid ourselves that the future will look very like  the past, and all we have to do is turn up?

Happy Australia day.

 

Image credit : City of Geralton WA RIC1383.jpg