Your say: week beginning June 8
Every day, we publish a selection of your emails in our newsletter. We’d love to hear from you, you can email us at yoursay@theconversation.edu.au.
Monday June 8
The US accuses Australia of modern slavery
“Your article on modern slavery made for interesting reading. The outrageous hypocrisy of the USA is breathtaking! Employers in the US have always taken advantage of their non-existent labour protection laws – what other advanced economy depends on hospitality workers working for $2, $3 or $4 an hour and tips (without which they couldn’t survive)? What other country (Western/advanced) is happy that maybe half of its citizens can’t afford health cover – and no, they don’t have Medicare!”
Stuart Kennedy, Oatlands NSW
The troubles of on-street parking
“We visited Japan about 5 years ago and our guide in Kyoto told us that a car could not be registered unless the owner could show that they had off-street parking. This certainly led to some strange alterations to small houses to accommodate this requirement.”
Annette Waterworth
Tuesday June 9
Off-street parking wishes
“Your article blithely observes that kerbside parking is unnecessary for statistical reasons. [But] kerbside parking is essential in areas settled prior to motor vehicles when dwellings were largely built without driveways or garages. Our largest population centres are Sydney and Melbourne. Inner city areas are short on any off-street parking. In fact, North Sydney Council has resident parking permits because of this. There must be some fairy godmother somewhere who can magic up some off-street parking. We would really welcome her.”
Julia Bovard, North Sydney
The trouble for bookshops
“Bookshops in Australia are a tricky subject. As much as I would like to support local bookshops, they simply don’t, and probably can’t, carry a wide enough range of books to meet the interests of many readers. They focus on best-sellers (that is, trash), new releases and Penguin ‘classics’; anything else is pretty much ignored. The reality in Australia is that the market for quality books is tiny and to survive bookshops can’t serve those people. Australia can’t be compared to France or Italy in terms of reader interest in quality books. Sadly, a bookshop in Australia that sold only books on sport would probably be highly successful.”
Gavin Oakes, Melbourne
One Nation’s housing policy
“One Nation are proposing that people who are not citizens or permanent residents would be forced to sell their properties. Would this apply to Rupert Murdoch who took up American citizenship several years ago?”
John Upham
Wednesday June 10
Why do we value uni more than trade skills?
“Vocational education, or in my school days, technical and commercial education, has a long history of living in the shadow of university education. It is a legacy of an approach to schooling transported here during the early years of European settlement. Being skilled at doing and making was devalued compared to abstract thinking. In the modern era, and indeed basically forever, doing, making and thinking are inextricably linked. The relentless push to increase higher education participation rates and to use them as the dominant indicators of national educational achievements and status has largely contributed to a vocational pathway being second prize. It simply makes no sense to ascribe greater value to one type of education and training over another.”
Dr John Halsey, Emeritus Professor, Flinders University
Should students be separated on ability?
“Imagine that instead of selecting the best players for an inter-school sports team, students were assigned to teams regardless of ability. Those with less ability are likely to have a miserable time (speaking from experience), those most skilled will be frustrated by the impact of the bumblers on their team’s performance, everyone loses.”
On street parking
“It is all very well to talk about kerbside parking being unnecessary, but try telling that to anyone with three or four adult children living at home because they can’t afford the extortionate rents and house prices we all face today. Mum and dad still working – have to with the cost of running a home, still mortgaged. Kids with social lives and jobs need cars. Public transport is not up to par generally. Where are we supposed to park five or six cars?”
Kim Ter-Horst
