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Politics and Culture - May 2007

Who has made money from Orble? I'd be interested to know if anyone out there has made money from their Orble postings. I have not nor have I expected to as I have only intermittently been posting and lately I haven't been posting at all (studying working and raisng children wil do that to you).

I would like to know though if anyone has been fortunate enough to recieve any cash and if so what amounts are we talking.



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Volunteering brings Rewards

May 3rd 2007 12:26
Dedication to helping others in need comes as second nature to someone who has worked as a nurse all there life, but it was the isolation of a two year stay in Italy unable to speak the language that lead Mern Betts to tutor refugee and migrants in English upon her retirement.

“Living in a foreign country and unable to communicate with those around while trying to raise small children made me feel very isolated and gave me an understanding of what migrants go through,” she says.

So with her experience in Italy firmly etched in her mind Mern sought work as a volunteer with Volunteering Queensland. She found the perfect placement for herself at the Annerley Literacy Centre teaching mostly refugees from Africa and Asia basic English as well as the day to day skills of coping in a vastly different environment to what they had been use to.


“For many it starts with the simple act of showing them how to sit on a seat which may seem absurd but it is all very new to them,” she says.

Mern has worked as a volunteer tutor at the centre for over five years, giving up two days a week to help those who in many cases have fled poverty, war and injustice to gain some independence in a country that both excites and terrify’s them.

It is Harmony Day and at the centre African rhythms reverberate around the room above the sound of laughter and chatter as a diverse group of people eat lunch and enjoy each others’ company. Mern proudly introduces one of her students.

Haregewine is a 20 year old refugee from Ethiopia who arrived in Australia in January 2005 with her brother and uncle. Mern believes her parents did not survive the war but is reluctant to ask.

When Haregewine first began classes at the literacy centre she would not make eye contact with anyone and her uncle and brother spoke on her behalf.

The woman who sits alongside Mern now has a wide smile and an air of confidence in her voice. She can now read and write, has found part-time work and hopes to attend TAFE college next year and has definite plans for the future which appear to have been inspired by Mern.

“I hope to do nursing,” Haregewine says. She smiles at Mern who appears to be taken aback by this plan.

In an instant the rewards of helping others less fortunate to succeed becomes as obvious as the proud smile on the faces of both Mern and Haregewine.

For Mern her enthusiasm for the job has not diminished. If anything, it has grown as she has seen the positive outcomes for her students. What does concern Mern is the current talk of proposed tougher English tests for new citizens and the Federal Governments attempts to making obtaining citizenship tougher.

“The people especially the women who come here always tell me they want to become Aussie women and for them passing English tests are just obstacles to them doing just that,” she says.

While many may not be able to pass a toughened English test Mern believes this does not diminish their desire to integrate in Australia it is just that they spend so much time surviving from day to day that developing better English skills is low on their list of priorities. Raising children and finding a job are their most important tasks.

Recent debate over the appropriateness of a large influx of African refugees into the local area also according to Mern goes unnoticed by her students.

“They are just to busy surviving and those issues are not really of concern to them” she says.

Volunteer tutoring for Mern has made retirement not seem like the end of her working life but simply a transition to another challenging and rewarding phase for her. She has no intentions of slowing down or giving up her volunteer work and her hope is that others take the time to gain similar rewards.
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Howards Nuclear Nightmare

May 3rd 2007 12:17
As the Howard government moves closer to the election date, becoming increasingly nervous with poll results, the weekend announcement of the push for nuclear power was classic Howard and his attempt to wedge the Labor opposition. This time though it maybe Howard who has miscalculated both the depth of anti-nuclear power feeling within Labor itself and the electorate at large.

On the weekend Labor in a largely stage-managed conference laid to rest the bizarre idea of opposing uranium mining but supporting the currently existing three mines which actually expanded under Labors own time in government. Kevin Rudd got his way and Labor now supports uranium mining.

However and this seems to be where Howard has miscalculated, to a person there was no support at all for the establishment of a Nuclear power industry. This would seem to also be true of the general public. While there has been a rise in support for nuclear power amongst the general public where the real crunch comes is when people are confronted with the idea of one in their own backyard. The silence of Government MP’s calling for the establishment of a nuclear Power plant in their own electorates has been deafening. In the lead up to an election this is hardly surprising.

Howard may well have been hoping that Rudd would have been rolled on the weekend at the national conference and then put into a situation where his party was anti-uranium but still supporting current mines. This would have made Rudd’s position untenable. His push for Nuclear power though seems to fly in the face of his stated support for the coal industry and it will be interesting to see what the coal industry thinks of the massive amount of government funding that will need to be poured into the nuclear power industry to make it viable.

Howard will be forced at some stage as he goes down this road to also name actual locations for these power stations and one can be fairly sure that it will not be Bennelong or a blue ribbon liberal electorate that will be confronted with the specter of Nuclear power stacks on their horizons.

It seems to be a desperate move by a government becoming increasingly desperate to wedge the opposition into a corner but one wonders where the motivation for such a move has come from. It could be that some of the Liberal power brokers who have formed a consortium to establish a nuclear power plant have had some influence of convincing Howard that this is an issue that would wedge Labor but the lack of any push from within Labor circles to establish a Nuclear power industry seems to fly in the face of that perception.

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