Andrew, you seem a little confused - the SRC is by its very nature political. The Union is the one which has the capacity to be apolitical (but, since student politicians are the ones who get elected, it will never be apolitical.)
Kill barnaby and the Coalition will loose its senate majoritywithoutaface said:I wonder if I assasinated Barnaby Joyce if the new parliament would grant me a pardon...
Um, mate you are actually quite wrong.Rafy said:Kill barnaby and the Coalition will loose its senate majority
(As his replacement would be appointed by the LABOR controlled parliament of Queensland)
Argh f*ck all those Stop VSU people. Idiots.
Talk about a long sentanceWhere a vacancy has at any time occurred in the place of a
senator chosen by the people of a State and, at the time when
he was so chosen, he was publicly recognized by a particular
political party as being an endorsed candidate of that party
and publicly represented himself to be such a candidate, a
person chosen or appointed under this section in consequence
of that vacancy, or in consequence of that vacancy and a
subsequent vacancy or vacancies, shall, unless there is no
member of that party available to be chosen or appointed, be a
member of that party.
While our representatives are almost inevitably going to have a political leaning, that doesn't mean the SRC as a whole must become a political organisation. The SRC has the potential to be a truly representative organisation, if it became non-partisan. I believe that politics is NOT an inherant part of representation, and that student issues are not necessarily partisan (or at least, not Left/Right partisan).lbft said:Andrew, you seem a little confused - the SRC is by its very nature political. The Union is the one which has the capacity to be apolitical (but, since student politicians are the ones who get elected, it will never be apolitical.)
melbournian said:Um, mate you are actually quite wrong.
1977 Referendum changed that, in order to prevent another 1975
From the amended Section 15 of the Australian Constitution
Talk about a long sentance
I can very much deal with a NOLS SRC - they've done well for the past few years (with a couple of minor exceptions.)
Second year, Bachelor of Liberal Studies @ University of Sydney
Heaven forbid I should find out about previous SRCs even though they were about before I started...Not-That-Bright said:EXAGERATING MORON ALERT
that's a little melodramatic, isn't it?Calculon said:A NOLS dominated SRC holds protests against the prosecution of people of whom there is video and photograpic evidence of their attacking police. You'd think they'd try to distance themselves from the crazies, but by protesting like this they're just showing that this kind of violence is acceptable among the left. If these are the types of fuckwits you want running your SRC I'd suggest you take a good hard look at yourself.
How am I being melodramatic? They did attack cops. There is solid evidence. The left continues to persist that these people are being trialled for holding "alternative" views. These are the facts, and it is absolutely disgusting that they try to justify such actions.walrusbear said:that's a little melodramatic, isn't it?
It's these "stupid principles" that delivered you the beautiful country you see today. Individual freedom should be held paramount, and the aims of the choice campaign were based upon this.lbft said:And what sort of SRC would you prefer, Calculon? A CHOICE one, perchance, that promises Howard-style bribes based on stupid principles?
I do like the Greens but I also like that NOLS has a habit of actually getting things done rather than jumping up and down on the spot about it.