Asquithian said:
Doesn't you gf have a problem with your sig!
Well we kinda broke up
Asquithian said:
Asqy son of blue collar workers - followed by public school and a good dose of center left yr 12 history, legal studies, economics and english teachers who loved Whitlam and his pasta ads.
You've done pretty well for yourself
I like the "it's time" theme song. Our public lecturer played it to us... it was entrenched in my head the whole semester
"It's time for freedom.... time for old folks... time for children... yes its time" lol
Asquithian said:
Plus two years at unsw arts doing globalisation courses, human rights courses, international law courses and history (of the Australian black armband variety) followed by Criminal law taught by another center lefty and public law taught by another center lefty. I also watch the ABC and SBS - it is safe to say that I'm the natural born adversary of the Liberal party. We are all creatures of our environment. My upbringing would not allow me to be a liberal party person.
Yes, that's true. I can't deny the influences my background has had. But I can see why you'd be quite disinclined to vote for the Liberal party, at least not any time soon, with this government. Those areas are obviously of importance to you, as they should be, and they haven't exactly been on the government's agenda recently.
I am quick to object though when it comes to certain wish-washy arguments in some of the crim lectures which might be classified by no better association as "leftist." Both sides embellish things, and social theorists can be no exception. I remember one of the articles said that the type of people being detained for public order offences were mainly lower class people or some such thing, and because police tended to focus on this "trivial" matter of public disorder, police custody was seen as a tool for controlling the disreputable poor!
I think some points in the crim course tend to be overstated somewhat. It's a captious attitude to attack every obviously empty piece of rhetoric politicians utter about crime. This is disproven with statistics, etc. But then more is tacked on, ie. some social theories, a few of which are a bit out there
But anyway, back to some vaguely recognisable point, liberalism is all for basic human rights, it just has wealth inequality problems. What I find annoying is the Howard government sometimes deviates from liberal principles when it really needs to stand by them