The
Australian History Summit
was recently held by the Commonwealth Government in order to strengthen teaching of history in schools. Public schooling remains a State based responsibility so this can reasonably be viewed as an anti-federalist imposition by the federal government. However, there was some interesting comments by Paul Kelly on the Insiders which leads the question to be asked; in the current environment where governments are heavily entrenched at the federal and state levels, is the real opposition to the state governments the federal government and vice versa?
The Insiders
is a politics as sport style television show, which to be quite honest normally bores me, however as an amateur historian who has produced several hundred pages of history since 1997 on the
Australian Flying Corps page
, as well as
this site
with a strong interest in Australian political and global constitutional history, I am intrigued by people's view of history in a national and public setting.
Paul Kelly commented on the history summit quickly dismissing that it was about a conservative-nationalist or anti-federalist agenda. But the fact is he casts it as a combative federal-states issue;
it's quite clear that the teaching of history and Australian history in our schools has fallen into gross disrepair; the present situation is most inadequate.
Now, if the states want to defend this, then they will have to defend what I think is a grossly inadequate situation, and the more these school curriculum are put on the bar of public opinion, the more they're analysed, then I think the more the states will be embarrassed and the more public opinion will turn against the states.
Which bunks any dismissal of the anti-federalist view. The more curious comment however was;
The reason the Commonwealth has intervened in this issue, the reason the Commonwealth wants to get involved, is because it's quite clear there is a significant problem.
And the documents make this quite clear. I think that, over time, if this debate does continue with some sort of confrontation, public opinion is likely to move behind the Commonwealth and also, the Commonwealth has got the force of intellectual argument behind it.
In a federal system the opposition to a state government that is neglecting its duties is the opposition party in the state parliament. However we are seeing the situation where the opposition to a state government is the federal government itself.
Shouldn't it be the opposition parties that are raising the issue of history being under-taught in the state schools, pointing out a deficiency in state governance?
Where are the opposition parties in the state parliaments? Why are they not doing their job? Are they unable to? Do they lack the media platform that the federal government has to shine a light on these issues?
Is this just more centralisation and anti-federalism? Yet we have seen many of the state Premiers act more as an opposition to the federal government than we have the opposition party in the federal parliament.
Is the parliamentary opposition so completely feebled by the politico-media system that they just have to wait patiently in the hope for a drover's dog election? Is this the entropy in a waitocracy?
Too many questions, and none of them bode well for the state of democracy in Australia.
cam
The current conservative philosophy for governance is well described by Paul Kelly in a recent op-ed titled:
At war over the law. This is the new brand of conservatism which is now competing with liberalism as the basis for governance. Forget left-right, that is gone as a binary distinction and the only use for it is to construct strawmen. Conservatism is based on executive dominance where the interests of the state trump individual rights. This is the opposite to republicanism and liberal democracy.
Kelly writes:
The bedrock view of the lawyers' rebellion is their refusal to accept the legitimacy of executive action based on statute and invoking the national interest.
The failure of this reading of government is that it elevates the executive and state above the individual. Coupled with a weak legislative - which is always a problem in parliamentary systems, this allows any despotic statute to justify the removal of judicial rights or an individual's full judicial expression.
The Migration Act of 2005 has been passed as statute law, but contains measures in it that allow arbitrary executive governance. It is a bad law and is the statutorial basis for the government to act arbitrarily. Which the executive did with Haneef by detaining him in an immigration detention center after the judicial could find no reason to detain him.
It was the executive in this case who refused to accept the authority of the judicial. This is a classic case of state of exception governance.
The other aspect of emergency is that it is done to save the state; maybe by suspending the constitution in order to save it (a-la Fiji), or in some other national interest where the collective concerns over-ride the political rights of individuals. This enables arbitrary governance from the executive. The handling of the Haneef issue carries all hallmarks of exception adhoc government.
So under the conservative definition of government; a weak legislative enables arbitrary government action in statute, which allows the executive to act arbitrarily, including ignoring the authority of the judicial, and to cancel an individual's political rights in the national interest.
At the best result of this style of governance is arbitrary government. At the worst it is tyranny.
We have constructed our political system with political technologies such as constitutionalism, federalism, separation of government branches, checks and balances, elected representatives, etc etc specifically to stop arbitrary government. Allowing it under executive dominance, national interest or emergency governance completely undermines the whole system. We do not have a republican system anyway, but we do have a liberal democratic one, and it undermines that completely.
Kelly continues:
Brennan slammed the detention powers as a "remarkable infringement on a person's common-law rights".
Such an expansion of executive power was undertaken without sufficient safeguards, the defect being "to transfer the protection of individual liberty from the judicial to the executive branch of government".
Brennan's remarks are illuminating. They make the pivotal issue one of power between executive and judiciary. His clear implication is that public acceptance of the laws cannot validate this defect nor make it acceptable.
There are two issues both of which form the core of republican doctrine. A simple, though not complete test, of republicanism is if the minority accepts majority rule, but with the knowledge they are secure in their rights. Public acceptance of laws cannot trump that. Otherwise it is known as tyranny of the mob.
The other issue is and in adjunct to the above; under republicanism an individual's political rights are universal, isotropic and inalienable. The executive and legislative cannot intrude into those rights. It is an area of absolute liberty an individual has which the executive and legislative are denied authority over.
This is why left-right is only useful for the construction of strawmen. The binary political descriptor is liberal vs conservative where liberal is individual as the dominant political entity and conservatism is the state as the dominant political entity. Under conservatism the state is generally embodied in the executive acting in national emergency or exception.
Most Australian conservatives are liberals. And those that wish to call themselves conservative or live conservative lifestyles,they have that liberty to live their lives as they choose. However this modern conservatism is unfit to inform governance. The end result - very quickly I might add - is executive rule and arbitrary government. We have seen this numerous times under the Howard government.
Another reason why left-right is meaningless is that I am sure future Labor governments will use emergency government and executive rule to dominate the political process. Already we have seen Rudd accept a war cabinet over the indigenous issues in the Northern Territory and not fight for liberalist or republican principles in the Haneef case.
This style of governance
is becoming a new legal order in western democracies; "a new rule of permanence, a new long-lasting condition of suspension of the rule of law, whereby politics could become the product of a succession of ad hoc decisions made by government officials and bureaucrats"
Another aspect of emergency governance is that it makes the politics unitary. Essentially the adhoc decisions follow the political path of the executive and not the deliberative path of liberal democracy.
Kelly writes:
As explained by journalist Leigh Sales in her recent book, while John Howard could have brought Hicks's suffering to an end, so could his own lawyers by striking a plea bargain three years earlier. They didn't. Their aim was to wage a political campaign to break Howard's will and force his complete backdown over Hicks. It failed.
Once exception is established the judicial component is not fought in the legal or court space - it is elevated by the executive into the political space. The politics become unitary and public.
We saw this in the Haneef case were the guilt/innocence of the defendant was fought out in the public political space by the executive, the AFP and Haneef's lawyer. By establishing exception or emergency and ministerial fiat over the judicial decision the fate of the individual ceases to reside in legal order and becomes one of pure politics. It escapes the court and the trial is conducted publicly in the political space.
This is a failure of executive governance not the judicial. In fact the executive probably prefers it to be fought in the public space than under the less controllable legal outcome of a court.
Australia is poorly organised to fend off the establishment of the new exception legal order. We do not have a separate executive and our legislative in parliament is already under the thumb of the executive. The creation and passing of laws are the domain of the executive in parliament.
We do not have a constitutionally entrenched bill of rights which prohibits the executive from intruding into liberties and judicial mechanisms the individual has to sue the executive to have their grievance heard - such as habeas corpus. Rights ensure that an individual is dealt with uniformly, apolitically, not under exception or arbitrary executive intrusion.
John Howard recently argued in an Australia Day speech:
I believe this [establishing a Bill of Rights] would be a big mistake for our democracy. A Bill of Rights would not materially increase the freedoms of Australian citizens. It will not make us more united, indeed I believe it would lessen our ability to manage and to resolve conflict in a free society.
Howard is arguing that only a vigorous executive can protect an individual's freedoms. That the state or 'national interest' dominates the capability of a society to maintain civil order. This is in direct opposition to republicanism and liberalism. It also carries the irony that there is no aspect of an individuals political or judicial expression that can be denied executive interference. Consequently in this form of governance the state is politically dominant over the individual.
Rights are not about 'a right for everyone to go to school' or 'a right to dignity'; they are brutal and explicit constitutional language which denies the executive and legislative intrusion into an individuals liberties.
A Bill of Rights would limit executive and legislative action. They create a sphere of liberty that government cannot intrude into. If the government does, it enables the individual to sue the government directly through the judicial.
Anyone interested in a very modern Bill of Rights which is explicit and subtractive from government should read
Avocadia's Bill of Rights v0.2.
More:
Bill of Rights articles on SSR.
I have been trolled by Paul Kelly. They are very skilled at their job and get me occasionally.
THE 2007 election has ripped open a chasm in the Liberal Party. Don't doubt that this is a crisis.
The Liberals still have their branch structure, are still the one of the two major parties in this country and only five years ago held power in half the state governments as well as the national government. So many of the Labor state governments are on the nose from being in power too long that some are going to flip to Liberal soon - probably next election in WA if not NSW.
I know the op-ed writers sell drama as much as trolling. But seriously, the Liberals will be fine. They will do six to ten years in opposition at the national level and then have government again.
There is no natural party of government.
The Liberal Party governs best when it embraces liberalism. Conservatism is a failure. It is too heavily reliant on executive whim and exception governance. Quite simply it is too Schmittian in its modern form. Conservatism only makes sense when it embraces liberalism and republicanism.
Arizona is an outdoor state and has lots of hiking in the city and around the state. Phoenix is unusual for most cities in having several large mountains in the center of the city with great hiking. Anyone who comes to Phoenix has to do the
Echo Canyon trail on Camelback and the
Summit Hike on Squaw Peak or Piesta Peak. The views of the city, suburbs and surrounding mountains are wonderful from Camelback and Piesta Peak.
For more experienced hikers there is the McDowell Mountains in North Scottsdale that has several difficult and strenuous hikes in
Tom's Thumb and
Bell Pass. Alternatively, you can hike the highest mountain in Arizona. At 12,600 feet
Humphrey's Peak is a long and difficult hike.

I am an Australian living in the United States as a permanent resident.
I am a software developer by trade and mostly work in Java and jump between middleware and front end.
I originally worked in the New York area of the United States in telecommunications before moving to Washington DC and
working in a mix of telecommunications, energy and ITS. I started my own software company before heading out to
Arizona and working with Shutterfly. Since then I have joined a startup in the Phoenix area and am thoroughly enjoying myself.
I do a lot of photography which I post on this website, but also on flickr. I have a photo-journalistic website which lists
the modernist and contemporary restaurants in phoenix. I have a site on the
Australian Flying Corps [AFC] which has been around since the 1990s and which I unfortunately
lost the .org URL to during a life event; however, it is under the
www.australianflyingcorps.com URL now.
The AFC website has gone through several iterations since the 90s and the two most recent are
Australian Flying Corps Archives(2004-2002) and
Australian Flying Corps Archives(2002-1999) which are good places to start.