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A call for the big picture

By Conrad Liveris - posted Wednesday, 30 July 2014


Australia, by and large, is a conservative country. We had issues with Asian migration, held onto the White Australia Policy for far too long and now can marginalise migrants from backgrounds which we don't always favour.

I fail to hear a cut through of the discussion which asks us: what do we want Australia to look like? We can be proudly accepting of our diversity as it stands.

We have boundless plains to share and a solid migration system is important. We are the country that has long-benefitted from immigration – Arthur Calwell made the call in the 1940s following World War Two that Australia must populate or perish.

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This government must be careful not to confuse their rhetoric to a more deep-seeded issue. Their campaign, and the broader media curiosity, on Operation Sovereign Borders is a challenging one for our region. We are amongst developing nations that have a terse history with colonialism. We must be careful not to be excessive in our demands.

Scott Morrison has acknowledged that the infamous Sri Lankan asylum seekers are now moving onshore. Good, I say. If we need to have detention, it should not be out of sight or out of mind.

Compare the Ukraine plane tragedy with this asylum seeker issue. We're dealing with a similar number of people and comparable media interest. What's the difference? I cannot turn a corner without seeing the faces of those lost in the Ukrainian tragedy.

Asylum seekers are shrouded in mystery and secrecy.

When hard-pressed neither the hard nor the soft can answer a simple question on immigration "what should our intake level be?". Obviously, we cannot take everyone and there shouldn't be an expectation to do that.

I think it should be higher than what it currently sits at; I look at our communities and the bevy of small business operators around our cities and can see the benefits of immigration.

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We are currently avoiding any rationality in the debate. We cannot continue a discussion focused on micro issues when we are evading a macro conversation.

This is one of the more testing policy issues of the time as political parties are only going harder than softer and are more intrigued by the next boat than anyone else. We must have the conversation amongst ourselves.

Immigration brings with it too many opportunities for us to assume it has but one dimension.

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About the Author

Conrad Liveris is a Community Advocate and Operations Analyst, working in business development and policy with a focus on gender equality and intergenerational issues.

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