are what universities are about if the quote from a deputy vice-chancellor of one of our local universities is correct.
I beg to differ. This is not what our local universities are about. They may have been once but they are no longer.
The deputy vice-chancellor in question was speaking about an upcoming "Festival of Democracy and Human Rights". It should be an event to applaud. What it would appear to be is something quite different.
If the reports are to be believed this event is apparently an attempt to provide an "antidote" to the "far right" through prescribing "trade union membership". The organisers are apparently concerned that one in four voters voted for the "far right" One Nation party in the state's Legislative Council. They like to forget there was nowhere near this percentage of voters in the lower house who were voting for the same party.
I imagine their concern is more that there is polling to suggest that One Nation voters could bring about a seismic shift at the next national election and suddenly be a serious opposition. Yes, polling suggests that. More people are openly suggesting they will vote for One Nation.
What the government and the current Opposition are not doing is addressing the reasons there is growing support for One Nation. Much of the support is around the demand for lower levels of migration, a different tax structure and the "net zero" debate as well as a different approach to housing, health and small business.
The government is not listening to any of this. The Opposition is apparently not prepared to change their policies. The media keeps suggesting that the fiery red head who leads One Nation is some sort of dangerous renegade, another Trumpian.
The reaction and the claim by the vice-chancellor interests me because I am well aware that there are real issues with "open discussion" at universities here. There is little "respectful sharing of ideas" in many areas. Students are not free to argue alternative views if they want to pass. I talk to students. I read their essays.
"Do you believe this?" I will ask them, "Or are you just regurgitating an idea you have been given?"
"It's what we have to say," I am told. Or, "It's what the lecturer told us."
This is what university is now about? Follow the "correct" version if you want to pass?
Across the way from me is a mature age student in his final year. He is no fool. He had a responsible role in industry before the business he was in went into liquidation and, along with many others, he found himself unemployed and unemployable. He is working to change that but he finds himself having to write one thing while he believes another. He started out trying to raise opposing points of view in his area (counselling) and found that, while he was being given a pass mark it was just that. When he provided the acceptable answers he was given distinctions. He wondered if there was something wrong with his previous work. Yes, there was. He was not following the acceptable way of thinking.
This man is old enough, mature enough and experienced enough to realise what is being done. He will go through the last year of his course without "rocking the boat" in order to get the piece of paper he needs. After that he can apply commonsense and world experience to whatever role he manages to get. Younger students cannot do that. They are captured. They are impressionable.
I suspect universities have always been something like this but there are other factors now at work. "Open discussion" is "the wrong sort of social media" now. The "respectful sharing of ideas" is not possible when the law moves in and prevents anything which might "harm" someone. It doesn't happen when you get marked down for having an alternative view, or for even just raising an alternative view.
We need genuine open discussion done with genuine respect. It isn't happening here. I just hope there is more of it elsewhere.