• Feature Article

    Hockey's hard sell

    Fiona Katauskas |  View this week's offering from Eureka Street's award winning political cartoonist.
  • Feature Article

    Greek neighbour's grace and lemons

    Nick Gadd |  He has two hobbies: playing the bouzouki, and reporting cars for parking infringements. We don't see much of him, but sometimes we hear plunka-plunka-plunk from the other side of the fence. On a night of storms, our gum tree splits and falls, and, at 3am, orange-suited SES men and women climb onto our roof with chainsaws. Our neighbour emerges in a dressing gown, waving his arms. 'Don't damage my lemon tree!'
  • Feature Article

    God of the cracks

    1 Comment
    P. S. Cottier |  mona lisa with monobrow, smiling past watchers as she spots the gay god, the god who goes down, sweet curser of figtrees, just to perplex theologists.
  • Feature Article

    Planning for a good death

    8 Comments
    Michele Gierck |  The ambulance has brought my 88-year-old mother to the Accident and Emergency ward at the local public hospital. In answering the doctor's question about resuscitation, I'm so thankful that my mother's wishes have been made clear, and documented by her general practitioner, by means of an Advance Health Directive.

Government blasé on Australian drone deaths

Justin Glyn | 27 May 2014

DroneWhile recent weeks have been taken up with thinking about the Budget's disproportionate impact on poorer Australians, another, more spectacular, area of government disregard for the lives and rights of its citizens has gone relatively unremarked. It goes to the heart of democracy, revealing not only the distance between Western governments and their citizens, but also the acceptance of that gulf as a fact of modern political life.

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  • Thai coup more of the same

    2 Comments
    Michael Kelly | 26 May 2014

    Tank and monks in Thai coupThe cycle of election, opposition protest, social and political instability that provokes a royal approved military intervention underlies how immature democracy is in Thailand. Unfortunately, in the medium term — the next five years — it will be 'same, same' unless there is a circuit breaker. That may come with the next trigger to instability which has to be set off sooner rather than later: the death of a very frail royal person.

  • Letting Australian industry die promotes workplace slavery elsewhere

    6 Comments
    Michael Mullins | 26 May 2014

    Cover of Baptist World Aid report 'Beyond the Barcode'The Australian Government needs to be less cavalier and reticent to subsidise local manufacturers, who are obliged to be transparent about their work practices and bear the costs of this. When our politicians praise workplace efficiency in other countries, they are promoting manufacturing processes that often exploit workers.

  • Planning for a good death

    8 Comments
    Michele Gierck | 26 May 2014

    Hands of older personThe ambulance has brought my 88-year-old mother to the Accident and Emergency ward at the local public hospital. In answering the doctor's question about resuscitation, I'm so thankful that my mother's wishes have been made clear, and documented by her general practitioner, by means of an Advance Health Directive.

  • Australia slips in generosity ranking

    6 Comments
    Paul O'Callaghan | 23 May 2014

    Caritas Australia Africa programLast week the Federal Government committed to a much smaller and 'just in our neighbourhood' aid program for the long term. This major shift sent a perplexing signal to the world, with Australia abandoning Africa's poorest at a time when Australian mining investment in Africa continues to boom.

  • Budget makes asylum seeker vilification official

    24 Comments
    Kerry Murphy | 22 May 2014

    The Government's vilification of people arriving by boat has reached the level where the term 'illegal' features in the Budget documents. Immigration Minister Morrison has insisted on referring to people arriving by boat as 'illegals' for some years, despite the Migration Act using the less pejorative term 'unlawful non-citizen'. This is not just a lawyer's linguistic debate; if it were not important, the Government would not insist on the term.

  • Love creates space for restorative justice

    8 Comments
    Andrew Hamilton | 22 May 2014

    Barred heartFor the good of victims and the community prisoners need to find the space in which they can feel remorse for the harm they have done, reflect on and change the patterns of life that contributed to the crime, and come to act accountably. To include love in penal justice may seem impossible. But recently in court a man was sentenced to jail for dangerous driving that led to the death of a young woman. Her father then embraced the driver.

  • Let's be good neighbours with Timor

    9 Comments
    Frank Brennan | 21 May 2014

    In 2006 Australia and Timor Leste hastily signed the Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea (CMATS) at a time of considerable political instability in Timor. After last year's revelation of evidence of Australian spying on the Timorese during the negotiation of CMATS, the Timorese decided to challenge its validity, and in March this year they had a spectacular win in the International Court of Justice that caused great embarrassment to Australia.

  • Moral teaching that falls on deaf ears

    19 Comments
    Neil Ormerod | 21 May 2014

    Bishop Fisher headshotAt a time when we are preoccupied with the shock and immorality of the budget, the Australian Catholic Bishops issue a direct and forceful challenge to current government policy. 'The time has come to examine our conscience.' But it seems no-one is listening.

  • My phone addiction nightmare

    Isabella Fels | 21 May 2014

    Person chained to phone$550 worth of calls on a $69 a month plan seemed like a total dream. I could keep myself hanging on the phone talking to my boyfriend and family all day and night long at my own convenience. I felt a sense of empowerment and freedom that I never felt before ... I woke up screaming over the $700 bill I incurred in just two weeks. What have I done? I felt weak. My future now felt bleak. There was simply no way I could pay it off.

  • The trust deficit is international

    2 Comments
    Evan Ellis | 20 May 2014

    Despite the bloodletting of last week's budget, the Australian Government could still find  some 12 billion dollars for 58 Joint Strike Fighters. This is part of the reality of the Asian Century. Australia will need statesmen and women of the highest calibre, but ultimately a lasting peace requires all nations to act together to create an international order that is actually ordered.

  • Bill Shorten's WorkChoices moment

    15 Comments
    Fatima Measham | 19 May 2014

    Bill ShortenNotwithstanding Kevin Rudd's merit as a candidate, there is no doubt that the unions-led campaign against WorkChoices was pivotal to handing government to Labor. What Bill Shorten has been handed this week in the Federal Budget is several WorkChoices with which to galvanise people. He needed it. His Budget reply offered a glimpse of the sort of Opposition Leader that Australians deserve.


  • Greek neighbour's grace and lemons

    Nick Gadd | 28 May 2014

    Nick Gadd's backyardHe has two hobbies: playing the bouzouki, and reporting cars for parking infringements. We don't see much of him, but sometimes we hear plunka-plunka-plunk from the other side of the fence. On a night of storms, our gum tree splits and falls, and, at 3am, orange-suited SES men and women climb onto our roof with chainsaws. Our neighbour emerges in a dressing gown, waving his arms. 'Don't damage my lemon tree!'

  • The Jesuits' patient, demanding banker

    Michael Kelly | 27 May 2014

    Julian SlatteryWhen I first proposed what was to become Jesuit Communications, the organisation that now publishes Eureka Street, Julian Slatterie was the first to respond. 'Now Michael,' he said. 'This proposal rests on five assumptions and three presuppositions and if any of them is voided, the project is likely to fail.' He answered that hesitation with 25 years membership of the board. Julian died suddenly of a heart attack last Tuesday.

  • God of the cracks

    1 Comment
    P. S. Cottier | 27 May 2014

    purple mosaicmona lisa with monobrow, smiling past watchers as she spots the gay god, the god who goes down, sweet curser of figtrees, just to perplex theologists.

  • Waiting room blues

    6 Comments
    Brian Matthews | 23 May 2014

    In the specialist’s waiting room, I usually while away the hours with quality BYO literary fare. But one day I had left my book in the car, and I searched the reading rack for reading matter on subjects more interesting than the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s Australian holiday. Succumbing at last to extreme boredom I got up, slid Soap World from under its ragtag competitors, and all was revealed.

  • Feelgood celebration of white male privilege

    1 Comment
    Tim Kroenert | 22 May 2014

    Ben Stiller as Walter Mitty on a skateboardGiven last week's unequivocal iteration of the dire state of Australian politics, perhaps we've earned the right to a bit of escapism. The Secret Life of Walter Mitty proves adept at turning the warm-and-fuzzies up to 11. Still there's no escaping the sense that Walter's ability to jet around the world in order to find himself is implicitly an expression of affluent, white male privilege.


WEEK IN POLITICS



Hockey's hard sell

Fiona Katauskas

Fiona Katauskas' cartoon 'Hockey's hard sell' shows Hockey and Abbott telling a crowd through a megaphone that they are a 'bunch of whingers, leaners and bludgers with no idea what's best for the country!'

View this week's offering from Eureka Street's award winning political cartoonist.


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