No doubt I’m not qualified to enter this debate. All of the people I quote are more experienced in this than I am, and I’d highly recommend you subscribe to their blogs rather than mine. You’ll learn more, for starters, and they update more often than I do. But the debate on equality of opportunity is an important one, and it is – like many debates – too important to be left solely to the professionals. This is, I think, going to be in several parts (I do run into problems with brevity).
Recently, Andrew Leigh (ALP Member for Fraser) wrote a book called Disconnected, arguing among other things that the social fabric of society is fraying. Christopher Joye critiqued the concern for income inequality: (more…)
On equality of opportunity
2No doubt I’m not qualified to enter this debate. All of the people I quote are more experienced in this than I am, and I’d highly recommend you subscribe to their blogs rather than mine. You’ll learn more, for starters, and they update more often than I do. But the debate on equality of opportunity is an important one, and it is – like many debates – too important to be left solely to the professionals. This is, I think, going to be in several parts (I do run into problems with brevity).
Recently, Andrew Leigh (ALP Member for Fraser) wrote a book called Disconnected, arguing among other things that the social fabric of society is fraying. Christopher Joye critiqued the concern for income inequality: (more…)