For once, I agree with Paul Keating

November 7, 2008

Kevin Rudd can't get close enough to Obama

November 5, 2008

Ever the globalist, ready to use each new opportunity to push towards global goverance, the Age reports that Kevin Rudd can't get close enough to Obama:
"Australia looks forward to working in the closest possible way in the closest possible partnership with an Obama administration, acting together to deal with the great common global challenges we face as democracies," he said...

"Given the great challenges we face for the future the world even more relies on strong American leadership into the future.

"Australia looks forward to working closely, in close partnership, in close friendship, with an America under this new Obama administration."
Meanwhile Turnbull is worried Obama is a protectionist:
Mr Turnbull said he expected no change to Australia's free trade agreement with the United States, despite Senator Obama's protectionist leanings.

Senator Obama has attacked the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and has argued "free trade" agreements needed to incorporate protections for workers and the environment.
Rudd's language is always pushing towards global governance.

Secret plot to let 50 million African workers into EU

October 11,2008
The Daily Express reports:
MORE than 50 million African workers are to be invited to Europe in a far-reaching secretive migration deal, the Daily Express can reveal today. 

A controversial taxpayer-funded “job centre” opened in Mali this week is just the first step towards promoting “free movement of people in Africa and the EU”.

Brussels economists claim Britain and other EU states will “need” 56 million immigrant workers between them by 2050 to make up for the “demographic decline” due to falling birth rates and rising death rates across Europe...
Yeah that sounds like a good idea ...

October 13, 2008

Curriculum to scale back Aussie history

The Australian reports:
THE emphasis on teaching Australian history in recent years will be scaled down in the national curriculum, as its initial draft, to be released today, outlines a course that places the national story in the context of broader global events...

"To think one can study Australian history in isolation is a bit short-sighted," Professor Macintyre said.

"There was a concern ... that it was solipsistic and not conducive to understanding Australia and its place in the world...

The draft, described as initial advice to the National Curriculum Board, was developed by a group of historians and history teachers led by the Left-aligned Professor Macintyre, whose appointment was criticised as being provocative by the conservative side in the history wars.

The broad aim of the curriculum is to introduce students to world history from the time of the earliest human communities, and to have an appreciation of the major civilisations that have existed in Europe, Asia, Africa, America and Australia.
Solipsism: extreme preoccupation with and indulgence of one's feelings, desires, etc.; egoistic self-absorption.

The Courier Mail reports:
Greater serve of history in national curriculum

HISTORY lessons will be soon be compulsory for every Australian student until the end of Year 10 under radical national curriculum proposals.

The Rudd Government is pushing for extended and compulsory history subjects across Australia as educators survey a generation of students with "gaps in their history"...

The NCB proposes the subject become compulsory and stand alone with about 100 lessons a year from Years 7 to 10, and a "distinctive branch of learning" constituting 10 per cent of all primary class time...

The radical reforms were formulated by a 10-strong advisory group containing Brisbane Girls Grammar School head of history Julie Hennessey, and led by University of Melbourne Professor Stuart Macintyre...

The proposals draw heavily from Monash University's National Centre for History Education.
No doubt there will be a strong dose of globalisation brain-washing, to pump out submissive global citizens who will not object to completely dissolving Australia's borders. Start brainwashing them from kindergarten, way to go Chairman Rudd.

A quote from the teachers guide an the National Centre for History Education:
... history "extends our perspectives and enlarges our experience". This broader view of other times and other events reduces the possibility of political parochialism and self-centredness - giving citizens a sense of perspective and of the pace of historical change.
That evil self-centredness just has to go. No doubt history will be concocted as one fatalistic train ride leading inevitably to an open-borders 'utopia'.

And another quote from NCHE:
Key aspects of civics and citizenship education

# Recognition of linguistic and cultural diversity.
# Promoting tolerance and respect for others.
# Supporting the development of identity - individual, school, local, national and global.
That's where it's all headed, to an identity not as Australian but as a global citizen.