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The Crew of the HMAS Sydney in 1941
Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, yesterday announced the final resting place of HMAS Sydney, putting to rest a mystery that has plagued the families of 645 missing Australian Defence Force personnel for more than 65 years.


Yesterday I also had a conversation with a colleague about the merits of revisiting the HMAS Sydney mystery, where, rather obviously, his argument came down to funding. He wanted to know who was funding the expedition, if it was costing the tax payer, and, utterly naively, if it was draining money away from a children’s hospital somewhere. Like that’s a real choice.

I could justifiably concentrate this article on the value of this discovery to the families of the dead and the sense of closure they must now be feeling; God knows they must have dreamt of this day for so long. It’s most certainly, as the Prime Minister put it, ‘an historic day’, which brings me to my point… the bigger picture.

It never ceases to amaze me that people still don’t understand the value of historical discovery. We humans are by nature a race of explorers. We need to conquer, not armies and people necessarily, but our own curiosity. Without historical exploration of the Roman Empire, the French Revolution, dinosaurs, World War I, Evolution, the Italian Renaissance, et cetera (the list could seriously go on for several pages), as a species, we would live in a world of missed opportunities.


We have travelled through all the lands and then continued over the vast oceans. We took to the sky but didn’t stop there and our curiosity has now taken us to the moon and far beyond.

Yes, we’re only talking about one World War Two Cruise Liner, but who knows what secrets we can unveil? We have a responsibility to the generations that follow us, to provide answers and solutions to the most terrifying questions. Without exploration and detailed knowledge of how we have arrived where we are today, we are surely doomed to make the same mistakes over and over.
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What's to like?
I’ve finally arrived. I’m finally at that age where I look down upon the youth of today with contemptuous eyes. I justify these feelings by assuring myself that today’s youngsters really are more idle, cocky and spoilt – but not necessarily in that order – than I ever was.

It could be nothing more than the usual animosity that flows all too freely between generations and the exact sense of despair that my parents and their age group had (or should that be have?) about me and my friends. Maybe that’s just the nature of a generation gap


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The death of Diana, Princess of Wales, just won’t go away and this week we were ‘treated’ to the story of the so-called ‘love of her life’, heart surgeon, Hasnat Khan, who claims that he would have struggled to cope with the limelight that stuck to the Princess like an annoying rash.

I was never a huge fan of Princess Diana’s when she was alive. I thought she manipulated the media, played the victim to perfection and for someone eager to stay out of the media spotlight she certainly made some bizarre lifestyle choices


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Hicks deserves a Second Chance

March 3rd 2008 21:47
David Hicks - Ex-Guantanamo inmate
It has been reported this week that wealthy philanthropist Dick Smith has been approaching friends and colleagues seeking employment for ex-Guantanamo Bay detainee, David Hicks. I was slightly ambivalent toward this story when it first came to my attention.

You see, the cynic in me is constantly looking for the angle when somebody does a good deed for another person and this instance was no different


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Every workplace has one. Their curriculum vitas undoubtedly read that they are ‘ambitious’ yet a ‘team player’, though they are only the former. They usually hide behind a façade of niceties and smiles. They may even profess to be your friend. Hell, it may even be you and you haven’t even noticed.

You may know them as Tim from accounts, Susan from HR or Isaac from sales. I know them as the company ‘jobsworth


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English Jumper, National Shame

February 22nd 2008 03:09
Brits Abroad
Several Sydney newspapers are reporting that an English tourist caused quite a stir yesterday afternoon by diving from Pyrmont Bridge into Darling Harbour at around 5.15pm. The jumper, egged on by his friends, apparently landed awkwardly but walked away from the incident relatively unscathed. What a shame. There are so many parts of this news story that trouble me; it’s hard to know where to start.

I suppose the first and most obvious issue is his motives. What were they? It is my understanding that the British Olympic Diving Committee's Chairman was nowhere near Darling Harbour yesterday, so competitive reasons can be ruled out. No. I rather think he was trying to impress his friends in the wackiest way he knew how. I hate 'wacky' at the best of times, but when it's done in the name of showmanship it really is pathetic


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Kosovo: A New Nation

February 20th 2008 00:09
On Sunday 17 February Kosovo declared itself independent of all other countries and moved a step closer to joining the EU and Nato. For a country defined by its internal conflict and bloodshed over the last two decades, there might finally be a glimmer of hope on the horizon. Well, that’s if it’s okay with everyone else?

Many countries and their politicians have rushed to welcome the move in the form of official diplomatic recognition. American Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, and British representative to Pristina, David Blunt, both delivered their documents of support to the new Kosovan President, Fatmir Sejdiu, whilst Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd went so far as to hail the declaration ‘the right course of action


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Guns = Death

February 15th 2008 02:18
It seems that almost weekly we receive reports from the US of another high school or college shooting. Today it's five dead at North Illinois University and last week a man was shot (subsequently dying from his wounds) by a classmate at EO Green High School in California. I could go on. In fact I will go on. Two weeks ago a student in Memphis was shot in the leg over a dispute in an algebra class and last Friday a female student shot two other women before turning the gun on herself at a college in Louisiana.

In any other country this would qualify as an epidemic. And let's not forget we're only talking about college and high school shootings here, which is only a fraction of the 28,000-plus gun related deaths each year in the United States of America, the self-proclaimed champions of democracy and western civilisation


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Love and Marriage

February 14th 2008 04:51
Love is in the air, everywhere I look around. Love is in the air, every sight and every sound. Ah, St. Valentine's Day. A day when people the world over confess their love and devotion to their 'someone special'. Isn't that nice?

Well, no, in my opinion. The whole affair is both corny and contrived. Surely we shouldn't need to pencil in a specific time when we display our love and affection for our partners (or potential partners). This we can, and should, do daily and without the help of Hallmark


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Australia says sorry.. or does it?

February 13th 2008 04:16
Aboriginal men (1939)
The scars of oppression run deep
I'm happy to announce that I have taken over ownership of The Daily Sydney, with the express aim to offer an opinion on the top news stories of the day.

And what a historical day I have chosen. Today, Australia's Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, during a speech in Federal Parliament, offered a seemingly heart felt apology for the governments role in the horrific ordeal of the stolen generation. The apology, worded very carefully, is supposed to pave the way for better relations with the indigenous communities around the country


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