Cambridge Clarrie wrote:Quite. I see it as a safety net against idiocy...
Back on topic. Over the past few years there seems to be a real increase in pride in our flag amongst Australians. It seems to have coincided with the incident at Cronulla in 2005 (which, let me make it clear, was not good). The Cheap as Chips type shops have really fuelled it by offering such inexpensive items. I wonder how many people would be flying a flag off their car window if it was made in Australia and they had to pay $20.00 for it???
Don't get me wrong though... still great to see people showing that they're proud to be Australian...
Ahh you beat me to it CC. I was just thinking about the grogged up Straya Day boneheads who drape themselves in Chinese made Aussie flags who seem more than happy with it. There's a fine line between genuine pride and a mob mentality fuelled by goonish nationalism.
As a kid growing up in the 70s and 80s there were still vestiges of our British heritage (which like it or loathe it, you can't deny) that permeated aspects of our language, media, food (yuck!) and general attitude. Now, I'm not about to let off firecrackers at the Ponderosa but many of these things I do miss and are infinitely preferable to the bend-over-and-take-it way we look to the US for cues.
"A no vote from any club means there is some sort of risk involved in our entry into the competition not working," Steven Trigg.