If a Journalist enters the woods, and doesn’t make a brand for themselves, do they still make a sound?
    1+

    I’m a journalism student, and I’m sick of being asked to respond to the notion of a ‘brand’. I even had Fairfax present a curriculum as part of my course which spent a week on “brand building”. I find this insufferable, and I’d like to see how other current practitioners and other students feel about this notion. Obviously, change is inevitable, but to what extent are journalists performers, too?

    Asked by:
    @alnwdn
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    Should Elizabeth St in Melbourne become a creek again?
    21+

    Elizabeth St in Melbourne is prone to flooding, and beneath the streets runs a creek (Williams creek) which seems to be desperate to reassert itself. Other cities have successfully (re)integrated waterways into their cities, notably Seoul, South Korea. Should Melbourne do the same?

    Asked by:
    @nightlightguy
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    How can Australian’s allow asylum seekers to be locked up indefinitely, when no one can guarantee their safety?
    12+

    Nauru is in such a parlous state of dysfunction that New Zealand has just announced it is no longer willing to fund its justice system. Staff who report the abuse are sacked and medical staff now confront the threat of a two-year jail sentence for reporting the abuse of women and children. I am worried we have that we have become a country that denies people their basic human rights.

    Asked by:
    Ava
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    Why isn’t it mandatory for MPs to use the public services (schools, healthcare etc) they are charged with providing for the rest of us? Wouldn’t that improve them lickity split?
    21+

    I believe that public institutions should be protected and invested in, and that those in power could use some further incentive to provide for this.

    Asked by:
    @tashludowyk
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    What will it mean for us when artificial intelligence exceeds our intelligence
    2+
    Asked by:
    Claire
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    Can you imagine answering a question that did not involve your conceptual thinking to reply?
    1+

    The is a unspoken assumption that questions require the mind to respond. We live in a world where the conceptual answer is no longer enough, rather the experiential or visceral response offers a different perspective .

    Asked by:
    Alexander Mackenzie
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    How do you maintain the discipline that allows you to be wild?
    3+

    For Cheryl Strayed. Getting started might be an impulse. From there to the finish requires something else.

    Asked by:
    @Peterhgh
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    How will the world end?
    11+

    Scientists tell us about the big bang and how this world began but I’m not sure about the ending. Do scientists know?

    Asked by:
    Sherdaw
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    What do you strive for in life: happiness, honor, meaning, depth, engagement, hope?
    20+

    Inspired by Rebecca Solnit’s The Mother of All Questions in Harper’s, and my own wondering if ‘happiness’ is really the best word to describe what we all are/should be looking for.

    Asked by:
    @noplain
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    How would our lives change if we talked about death as much as we talk about birth?
    13+

    Because I believe that talking about death can be life-changing and life-affirming.

    Asked by:
    Karin
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    Does the Aboriginal culture of family and sharing help or hinder their position in Australian society? And is migration an added threat?
    5+

    Because new waves of migrants continue to make healthy, happy new futures in Australia while the Aboriginal people seem to suffer continued low employment and poor health.

    Asked by:
    @janusflytrap
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    What will it take for Australia to stop targeting Islam?
    8+

    Australia has had several significant waves of migration (eg. Greeks, Vietnamese, Africans). Each wave coincides with which group mainstream Australia directs it’s vitriol, fear mongering and racism. But the targeting of Islam has been particularly intense.

    This matters to me as a daughter of migrant parents, and a mother of bi-racial kids, who simply wants them to grow up in a world free of racial and religious judgement.

    Asked by:
    @miss_dianne_t
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    Is the universe really as big as we think it is?
    8+

    The concept of light years, billions of stars in our galaxy and then billions of galaxies outside of the Milky Way is just too big to get a grip on. Maybe there is another concept of distance in a physical law that we haven’t discovered yet, and that will make more sense of these distances and scale? Maybe the micro-world is as big relatively to the universe, that is, the relative distances between individual components of atoms and molecules is just as vast as the universe is big? How can there be an end to the universe – where is it located if it is confined in some way? We know so much – why don’t we know this?

    Asked by:
    Peter Martin
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