Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Judicial shockers ... Latest from the trouble prone Queensland branch of the Federales ... Administrative law upsets ... Sandy Street overturned ... On the level in Canberra ... Missing aged care accountant ... Law shop managing director skewered ... Ginger Snatch reports from courtrooms around the nation ... Read more >> 

Politics Media Law Society


Polly gets a cracker ... The Parrot falls from his bully pulpit … Performances … The end of the Wharf Revue … Bruce McClintock on stage at The Onion Club … Freaks on the loose in Washington ... Read on ... 

This area does not yet contain any content.
Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

It's Hitlerish ... Reelection of a charlatan ... Republicans take popular vote for the first time in 20 years ... Amnesia ... Trashing a democracy ... Trump and his team of troubled men ... Mainstream media wilts in the eye of the storm ... Depravity, greed and revenge are the new normal ... Roger Fitch files from Washington ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


The life, loves, triumphs and disappointments of Frosty Tom Hughes ... 1923-2024 ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

A trial for France ... French teacher beheaded after showing caricatures of Mohammed to the class ... Young student's false claim ends in tragedy ... Misinformation takes off on social media ... Media storm ... Religion infiltrates public life ... Trials unfold ... Hugh Vuillier reports ... Read more >> 

"Over many years, certain journalists employed by Nine (formerly Fairfax) newspapers have been resentful of our client’s prominence as a commentator on many political and cultural issues, and the malicious and concocted allegations giving rise to the imputations constitute a concerted attempt to destroy our client’s reputation. 

Following the Sydney Morning Herald's exposure ... Mark O'Brien, Alan Jones' solicitor, December 12, 2023  ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

The great interceptor ... Rugby League ... Dennis Tutty and the try he shouldn't have scored ... Case that changed the face of professional sport ... Growth of the player associations, courtesy of the Barwick High Court ... Free kick ... Restraint of trade ... Braham Dabscheck comments ... Read more ... 


Justinian's archive

Rosenblum v Foreman ... From Justinian's archive ... March 1995 ... When Rupert Rosenblum went to court over a missing house ... Memories of Carol Foreman and her backdated document ... Rocking the foundations of the admin of justice ... Read more ..


 

 

« Leave application rejected | Main | Boxing beats scholarship »
Thursday
Sep262013

Losing touch with ourselves 

Junior Junior goes all political ... Her sought-after insights on the federal election and the bar's tussle over incorporation ... Time for change ... Colleagues agree 

SEPTEMBER has been an enormous month for politics - not only the federal election, but politics at the NSW bar over the incorporation drama. 

Me? I was ambivalent about both. 

Not because I don't care, but only because as far as the choice for running the country was concerned the options were crap. 

As for being an incorporated barrister, I don't fancy it - but I don't have an issue if someone else wants to do it. 

However, I do have an issue with the forest that was felled in the propaganda war from both sides. 

I got to the point where I was throwing out any prepaid envelopes with my name incorrectly spelled. 

To me, the federal election result said that Australians wanted stability - even if that stability comes at a high cost. 

As far as I can see those costs include the environment, women's rights, gay rights, human rights and virtually all other rights that should be self-evident. 

There wasn't much to choose between: a petulant man-child, a bumbling intransigent, a gaggle of yokels, a rich, dinosaur-loving nutter, Hanson, shooters, Christians, and so on. 

It raises the issue of compulsory voting and whether it is doing more harm than good. 

And then there are those preference deals, which allow all sorts of fringe dwellers to end-up with the balance of power. 

Craziness all round, I say. 

In three years time most people would have realised that whoever they voted for in 2013 was a mistake. 

The incorporation debate shows that the bar is working in the opposite direction to the general Australian public.  

While the average Aussie voter is calling for change at any cost, the geriatrics of the bar are demanding no change at any cost.  

I think the bar is doing itself a disservice by attempting to insulate itself from change. It will slowly become extinct if it doesn't get modern. 

Of course, it has a perfect right to stay stuck-in-the-mud if it wants to. 

Lots of younger barristers I've talked to think the bar has lost touch with the outside world in terms of how it is perceived. 

It is no longer regarded as the repository of legal wisdom and an honourable profession untainted by human foibles. 

Some grizzly barristers still see themselves in the same way the clergy used to regard itself - untouchable and immune. 

Perhaps we will have to allow ourself as barristers, in order to survive, to be more of a business and less the pretence of a profession. 

Of course, it would be nice if it was a business that upheld some noble ideals and acted for the poor, etc. 

We can call ourselves a profession all we want, but there isn't a profession that has not been found out for what it is: a bunch of flawed people just trying to do the best for themselves and the customers. 

Anyway, that's what I think. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Member Account Required
You must have a member account on this website in order to post comments. Log in to your account to enable posting.