What is your most dangerous idea?
    10+

    Answers are almost always too safe.

    Asked by:
    Matthew
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    When will women’s health issues such as endometriosis be given greater priority? They are chronic and can mean an end to life and happiness.
    10+

    Endometriosis and related conditions are VERY expensive to treat and go hand in hand with not being able to work so women and girls cannot move out, gain employment and are stuck in a hideously painful rut. The medical profession can be woefully uneducated about women’s health and more drugs need to be on the PBS. I pay about $200 a month for mine!

    Asked by:
    @BinsQuan
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    Why are other people’s audience questions so terrible?
    31+

    You know what I mean.

    Asked by:
    @oslodavis
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    How will we end chronic homelessness in Australia?
    17+
    Asked by:
    Matt
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    Why does cold and flu medication kill your appetite?
    1+

    I’ve not been hungry for days…

    Asked by:
    Jazz Booth
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    How do we really fight world hunger and poverty? Or is it possible to get rid of inequality altogether?
    10+

    I am asking this question because the UN has identified a set of development goals such as equal access to education and eradication of poverty that it made me wonder if we as citizens of the world can truly achieve these goals.

    Asked by:
    @mikaelakristin
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    Is it possible to be a fatalist, an existentialist and a nihilist all at once?
    2+
    Asked by:
    @leglesslegs
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    Would non-combat national service be good for all Australians?
    7+

    It always surprises me how few Australians have seen their country or met people from other parts of it. If we were compelled to make better connections with people from different backgrounds and situations, would we have a better understanding of Australian-ness?

    Asked by:
    Martha Crawford
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    In our organisations, do we assume that all people think alike?
    1+

    I saw graffiti on a wall showing two characters arguing with each other. One said, ‘Question Everything!’ The other said, ‘Why?’
    I was introduced to a body of work on cognitive style that highlights 40 years of research on the predictable differences in the way people think. People do not think alike yet can anyone suggest any management strategies in any organisation or in society that recognizes these differences and allows for different styles of thinkers to thrive? I have asked this question for ten years and found just one organisation that shaped approaches for different style of thinkers. The cost to organisations and societies for not recognizing these predicable differences is tremendous. You see it in our cliches. For some, seeing the glass as half full is positive. For others it is negative as you fail to see that the glass as twice the potential. As such, seeing the glass as half empty is positive as you twice the potential. Yet society thinks seeing the glass as half full is seen as positive; it can also be seen as accepting the mediocrity of the status quo.

    Asked by:
    @edbernacki
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    What will we be eating in 2050?
    32+

    What will sustainble farming look like and which cuisines will dominate flavour wars?

    Asked by:
    @Kristen_Boschma
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    Does ‘good taste’ really exist?
    8+

    Could the legitimisation of the guilty pleasure mean the end of judgmental music criticism (good riddance!), or are new hierarchies of taste emerging?

    Asked by:
    @mrconnorobrien
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    How many parts per million of co2 were recorded in the atmosphere today?
    1+

    El nino and la niña are natural weather phenomena. Climate change is not. Is a scientist or two measuring co2 in the australian atmosphere so that we can mitigate our behaviour and transit to market in a considered way. This affects peoples living standards. Let’s avoid poverty!

    Asked by:
    Carolyn Eccleston
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    Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who’s the scariest monster of them all?
    4+

    And don’t say “humankind”, that’s no fun.

    Asked by:
    @pinknantucket
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