Warrigal
SF VIP
- Location
- Sydney, Australia
You've all heard the song and most know that Australia began as a convict settlement in 1788 when three British naval sailing ships discharged their cargo of miserable felons on a beach in what is now Sydney Harbour.
What sort of hell hole grows from such an inauspicious beginning?
Australia should be a mean, dog-eat-dog society, replete with thieves, cut throats and murderers.
But it is not.
Today I left home to visit Hubby in the nursing home and when I returned, key in hand, I went to open the back door. Not only was it unlocked; it was actually wide open, just as the gates to the carport always are after I drive out.
Anyone can walk round to the back of the house and look in the kitchen window to see if anyone is at home.
But it has never happened in the nearly 57 years that we have lived here in the outer suburbs of Sydney.
Why is that? - we don't have a dog in the yard, nor is the house alarmed. I won't tolerate a firearm in my home.
Where are the armed intruders and home invaders I keep hearing about?
This country that I love certainly has its fair share of crime but the reality is that criminals are hardly riding roughshod over law abiding members of the community. My daily experience is that people go out of their way to help each other. In Australia we call it mateship when we have each other's backs. We place great value on mateship.
Another highly valued quality is that of the 'fair go'. I cannot claim that everyone in Australia actually receives a fair go but most of us reckon that a fair go is everyone's birthright. We have a tendency to stick up for the underdog.
During the days of the convicts, when a man or woman had served their time, they were given a ticket of leave and allowed to work and prosper in the new colony. A few became bushrangers but most found honest work; some started their own businesses and some even became architects and medical practitioners. Together with the free settlers who arrived later, they built the foundations for modern Australia.
We still have serious social problems to tackle but it is my belief that by combining our efforts, instead of fighting each other, we will succeed in creating a fairer society where crime is the exception rather than the norm.
Yes, I know. I am Pollyanna at times, but isn't it better to have a positive mindset than to go around crying, "Woe, woe and thrice woe", like the three witches in Shakespeare's MacBeth?
What sort of hell hole grows from such an inauspicious beginning?
Australia should be a mean, dog-eat-dog society, replete with thieves, cut throats and murderers.
But it is not.
Today I left home to visit Hubby in the nursing home and when I returned, key in hand, I went to open the back door. Not only was it unlocked; it was actually wide open, just as the gates to the carport always are after I drive out.
Anyone can walk round to the back of the house and look in the kitchen window to see if anyone is at home.
But it has never happened in the nearly 57 years that we have lived here in the outer suburbs of Sydney.
Why is that? - we don't have a dog in the yard, nor is the house alarmed. I won't tolerate a firearm in my home.
Where are the armed intruders and home invaders I keep hearing about?
This country that I love certainly has its fair share of crime but the reality is that criminals are hardly riding roughshod over law abiding members of the community. My daily experience is that people go out of their way to help each other. In Australia we call it mateship when we have each other's backs. We place great value on mateship.
Another highly valued quality is that of the 'fair go'. I cannot claim that everyone in Australia actually receives a fair go but most of us reckon that a fair go is everyone's birthright. We have a tendency to stick up for the underdog.
During the days of the convicts, when a man or woman had served their time, they were given a ticket of leave and allowed to work and prosper in the new colony. A few became bushrangers but most found honest work; some started their own businesses and some even became architects and medical practitioners. Together with the free settlers who arrived later, they built the foundations for modern Australia.
We still have serious social problems to tackle but it is my belief that by combining our efforts, instead of fighting each other, we will succeed in creating a fairer society where crime is the exception rather than the norm.
Yes, I know. I am Pollyanna at times, but isn't it better to have a positive mindset than to go around crying, "Woe, woe and thrice woe", like the three witches in Shakespeare's MacBeth?
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