A fifteen year old, who was recently asked about Australian
values, said we didn’t have any. Whether
we didn’t have any values or whether those values were not particularly
Australian but might also apply to other countries in the world, was not made clear.
At the time of Federation in Australia, when the
Constitution was drawn up, contemporary values such as the right to vote for a
democratically elected parliament, freedom of religion, freedom to join a trade
union and the freedom to move unhindered around the country were included. Other
less defined values might be respect for the individual, equal rights for men
and women and equality under the law for everyone.
My idea of an Australian value is that of the ‘fair go’.
‘Hey, fair go mate.’ The phrase once embedded in the
Australian vernacular; not an expression which might have been heard among the
erudite and well educated set but one used by people lower down on the socio-economic
ladder. Quite simply it meant that
something was plainly unfair, something should to be done to rectify this
unfairness and voicing the thought was the first step in putting things to
rights.
Whatever happened to the idea of the Fair Go? It has vanished, sunk without trace, gone the
way of the dodo wearing its button-up boots. Pushed right into the background in the contemporary scene, where
anything but a Fair Go applies to many, many people. I will not start on the unfairness list here
but it is apparent that many people want to apply the Fair Go only to
themselves and to hell with anyone else.
For many people in this country it’s all about me and what’s
in it for me these days.
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