Quote:Good to see that you argue against Australia having a codifed set of human rights like every other democratic country by ignoring everything except the one anomoulous 'right' in a single country's laws.
Now if you had formulated a valid and rational argument to show how Australia, alone in the western democracies, was coreect and all others was wrong you might have had something.
BTW how do you know you have something if it isn't written down and is easily accessible?
I have yet to have any anti-codified rights advocates show me where our rights are, so far they 'just are'.
Australia is a land of obligations and priveledges that ebb and flow with the whims of our political masters; I personally would like something more than that.
Yes we have something more than that, but we don't take it.
If we realised that we actually
do have something more which is written in stone, we'd be far less likely to be gunning for some version of a republic which will surely take away more rights rather than donate more rights to us.
So, instead of looking for some fanciful legislation which might generously donate to us some more rights, I'd rather propose that we look to what is already there, but which has been hidden from us in the form of "out of reach" laws.
Yep, what you want from a republic is already there, but it has been made inaccessible to you.
Nope, you don't have a snowflake's chance in hell of voting for and procuring a republic which will have anywhere near the clout of the rights that you already have, but which have been made inaccessible to you.
So rather than looking at the equation as an "ebb and flow" set of laws, I think that you should be looking at redeeming those "set in stone" laws which have already been passed and which cannot be changed. That would surely outdo any fanciful version of a republic that you have in mind.
Because, you know, historical people that have gone before you/us already knew your/our problems. They may not have been so technologically advanced, but they set in stone some laws which would protect us for all of time. That was rather nice of them wasn't it?
I think it was rather nice.
If we really want to repay the "niceness" then we oughta start reading the "Ye Olde" laws which cannot be changed.
If you deal with the lower courts, then there is little recognition, however, if you progress to the higher courts, you will see the gravity that these "Ye Olde" laws hold.
The republic which you vainly attempt to bring into recognition is already there, and has been for hundreds of years.i