The three misbeliefs that push families to up-end their lives
Ranking education, and ranked education, is rank nonsense.
Elizabeth Farrelly is a Sydney-based columnist and author who holds a PhD in architecture and several international writing awards. A former editor and Sydney City Councilor, she is also Associate Professor (Practice) at the Australian Graduate School of Urbanism at UNSW. Her books include 'Glenn Murcutt: Three Houses’, 'Blubberland; the dangers of happiness’ and ‘Caro Was Here’, crime fiction for children (2014).
Ranking education, and ranked education, is rank nonsense.
In or out of the water, for some it's the same old tale of entitlement.
Far too often shoddy, infuriating, ugly and dangerous, they're the very opposite of sustainable density.
The tussle between "I" and "we" underpins everything humans do on Earth.
Cities, feminism and the 5 million. Last week's anti-Trump Women's Marches drew over a million marchers in the US and almost 5 million worldwide; 750,000 in LA; 10,000 in Sydney; 673 cities globally; no arrests. The monstrous regiment made itself serenely, urbanely felt. What, if anything, does this mean for our first conservative female Premier?
So we're at this soiree and yet another rich young bloke is telling me how he wants to build a container house in the country. I make an emergency bathroom dash to poke my eyes out in private. Should I tell him how much I would never, not ever, live in a container?
When the Property Council, the Urban Task Force and the Planning Minister agree that something is in the public interest it's time to get suspicious. When the Daily Telegraph wheels out first-homers Emma and Jeremy from Kellyville as if it's they, the little guys, who'll benefit from ripping away planning red-tape, suspicion should sharpen into scorn.
Fence the harbour? Are they mad? The story on the proposal to ring-fence Darling Harbour sat beside one on the NSW road toll. The scale is different. In five years we've had two drowning deaths at Darling Harbour; 1741 on the roads. But both issues go directly to the heart of nanny-statism.
Elizabeth Farrelly manages to find some flowers among the rubble.
Holes, gratitude, prayer; together, these apparently unrelated ideas cast a revealing light on the spiritual inflection point we call Christmas.
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