As what we teach is set by the governments of each state, and now the federal government with the national curriculum it is clear that this anti-British history push is coming from governments - of both persuasions.
Yes, I agree. I don't blame the teachers per se. It needs to be changed at a curriculum level (in my opinion of course).
The push is for more Asian history as that is seen as more relevant to Australia in the future.
Well this is something I also contest, I would also ague that we have more to gain from maintaining and reinforcing our ties with Britain than trying to forge new relationships with Asian countries but that is a whole other topic of discussion.
History only gets 50 hours a year in NSW high schools and we do more than any other state - and even the new national curriculum which suggests 80 hours is only getting 50 in NSW and less in the other states has virtually no mention of British history - because the governments don't want that taught.
Whether it is a republic by stealth or whether it is truly reflective of the changing nature of the nation I don't know but the Queen is totally irrelevant to us in Australia today. Think about the fact that in a couple of weeks she and her family will be at the Olympics cheering on the defeat of Australian teams in events - and then tell me that we need her - her own granddaughter is competing against us.
Well I don't have a problem with that at all, I would expect the Queen to support England at a sporting event, she is English. I don't see that as anything of any consequence. You use this as an example of her irrelevance today but it has been like that ever since Australia has existed.
As for the comment about God - only 19% might be of no religion but the other 81% don't all believe in the same god. I teach at a Christian school and we obviously have students who believe in the Christian God but we also have students who believe in a myriad of other gods - as the Hindus have over 3000 which god to they include in the oath??
Which ever one they like, all of them or none at all. Like I said, it could be made optional. Does you school remove all references to God, religious classes and ceremonies because some of the students don't believe in the same God as Christians do?
I am the opposite of you Iluvbertie, I was a republican and the more I have learned about the royal family and our history and ties with the monarchy I have gradually become a monarchist! Even when I went through school (which was quite a few years ago
) the Queen was never mentioned and I, like school children today, grew up thinking she was irelevant. Over time I have educated myself about Australian and British history (partially through travel) and now have a better appreciation of the worth of the Queen to Australia.
But I wonder if this is a chicken or the egg situation? Should we get rid of her as our head of state because she is irrelevant to Australians, or is she irrelevant because we have gradually marginalised her in Australian culture?
As for a President who is Australian, it would end up being a political appointment. Who would we have; people like Bob Hawke, Gough Whitlam, Paul Keating, John Howard - all ex-pollies. (or maybe we could have a popular vote then we might end up with Kylie Minogue or Warnie?
). I would rather stick with the Queen.
One other thing (last one I promise
) . We are always being told that everyone wants a republic and we don't care about the monarchy anymore and yet whenever we have a royal visit a lot of people turn out and it gets a lot of media coverage. An online poll about the changes to to Girl Guides pledge was running at 70% against the changes. I really question whether the argument that most people don't respect the Queen and want a republic really reflects the majoruity of opinion at the moment. My feeling is that attitudes towards the monarchy are swinging back in favour of maintaining the status quo.