Waleed Aly

Arrente woman Celeste Liddle believes that fear is winning the day in the Voice referendum discussionΒ and that a process of truth-telling first could have achieved a different result. Pip Hinman and Ruth Heymann report.

In the aftermath of the terrorist attack on mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, in which 50 people were killed, some of the comments from those with a public platform have been breathtakingly offensive.

I’ve often heard it asked, β€œIs Australia a racist country?” only for the question to be railroaded by a series of semantics: β€œWhat does that even mean?”; β€œHow can a country have a collective mindset?”; and β€œYou can’t confer a universal attitude onto a population of 24 million, surely?”

Politicians and commentators tell us there are such things as Australian values. The same quibbling arguments about whether Australia is collectively racist apply to so-called national values.