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Let's get rid of this embarrassing King's birthday holiday

Let's get rid of this embarrassing King's birthday holiday

Those distilled values – whether in the American or Australian vernacular – are shorthand ways of referring to the driving force of democracy; the fight for equality. As that greater observer of democracy Alexis de Tocqueville noted, equality is the basic theme that has maintained itself through the ages, that has prevailed through the obstacles and contradictions of Western intellectual history.
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Equality doesn't mean that some people don't hold power or status. What it does mean is that power and status are earned – and that they can be taken away and exercised by someone else.
No matter what King Charles does, his reign will endure until he dies or abdicates, at which time it will be immediately embodied in another family member. This is incontestable, inherited superiority – the opposite of equality. Equality doesn't mean sameness either – in fact, it means the freedom to be different.
Perhaps the growing supremacy of sport in Australian culture, and all that goes with it, is the reason behind Australia's lack of interest in the source of our democratic freedoms. We don't do difference very well any more. We were far more eccentric in the past. We shy away from discussions about politics or ideas, content with the distraction of betting on who kicks the next goal.
Patrick White might have been right when he predicted that ' sport could sink us '.
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The inclination to run away from political discussion is passed off as endearing Aussie nonchalance – 'she'll be right, mate'. But it's not admirable – it's a sign of privilege and immaturity. Every Australian should be able to explain what it means to be a democratic country, and how it aligns with our freedoms, including the freedom to celebrate the natural beauty, the clear skies and clean waters of our land.
Every Australian should recognise their freedom to observe, judge and criticise their nation – a marker of democracy. This includes a vigorous questioning of today's celebration, and the right to wonder what the hell it means.
If our right to criticise were taken from us, we would certainly feel its loss. But would we even be able to articulate what went wrong?
As in the US, the greatest threat to our political freedoms may be indifference and lack of interest.
All new Australians are informed of what citizenship means; of the freedom that it bestows. Perhaps it will be these Australians – many from less democratic nations and more attuned to what democracy looks like – who will question the incongruity of a loudly egalitarian nation participating (however feebly) in the birthday party of an unelected figurehead – an elderly King on the other side of the world.
Let's hope a new and inquisitive generation of Australians will reignite the flame of republicanism. Let's hope sometime soon we'll give the King his final birthday greetings, and tell him, finally, belatedly, to nick off.

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