JaredR
Save Sderot
There's a difference between not playing the national anthem and declaring that you will NOT play it.
Exactly. They did the first one, not the second, so this thread is moot.JaredR said:There's a difference between not playing the national anthem and declaring that you will NOT play it.
Apparently most Australians support Muslims being allowed to wear their scarves in schools. Personally I think they should be banned in educational institutions and government offices, as they are in Turkey. I can see how that might inflame Islamic radicalism though, and it's not like we have a problem with that here, as they do in Turkey. Probably better to just let sleeping dogs lie and leave it to assimilation.Josip Broz Tito said:They should ban muslims from wearing scarves, the same way that the Netherlands has.
When Muslims wear headscarves, the hijab or burqa you cannot tell if they are a woman or a man. An terrorist could readily use this cloth of gender camouflage to its advantage by hiding their weapons underneath it.
Trefoil Apparently most Australians support Muslims being allowed to wear their scarves in schools. Personally I think they should be banned in educational institutions and government offices said:I do not know why they support it...fucking ridiculous. But I agree with your statement 100%
Most people I know actually do. Just in that unique, modest Australian way where you kind of like it but don't pay much attention to it, and won't praise it, until somebody significantly disparages it.gibbo153 said:australian's dont even feel patriotic about our national anthem anyway.
Yeah but you're the same dolt who can't seem to identify any culture in Australia. Great job, mate.Will Shakespear said:What's to be patriotic about?
It's a song about the British empire written by a Scottish-born man that only became our national anthem 30 years ago
It doesn't matter who wrote it.Will Shakespear said:What's to be patriotic about?
It's a song about the British empire written by a Scottish-born man that only became our national anthem 30 years ago
Respect the flag, respect the anthem!alexdore993 said:It doesn't matter who wrote it.
Do I have to remind people that it is still our national anthem? This isn't about whether or not people like the song or not; it's about what the song represents.
It's supposed to represent the unity of Australia, be an expression of how much we appreciate the land and how proud we are to be Australian. It essentially, is symbollic of the hardship the country has gone through and overcome as a nation.
It's not the music; it's what it represents and to be quite honest, I'm surprised peple even needed reminding of that.
Thats because he sounds like a total, uneducated idiot...so either a troll or a fool, either way not worth paying attention toclintmyster said:everyone ignores the guy who posted from the school xD
agreed. also i'm allergic to excessive internet slang.Serius said:Thats because he sounds like a total, uneducated idiot...so either a troll or a fool, either way not worth paying attention to
insecure bogan detectedTrefoil said:Yeah but you're the same dolt who can't seem to identify any culture in Australia. Great job, mate.
yeah:Trefoil said:I wouldn't bother, sam. False alarm.
You can get the full story here: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24754875-5006786,00.html
lol, my public selective school played it...twice maybe three times a term?School trustee Keysar Trad said news the anthem was not played regularly at school assemblies came as a shock.