Assessments - Part Two

Civility demands many assessments in the public interest.

How have you been making those assessments this year?

How do you assess political standards internationally?

How do you assess political standards locally, especially when local politicians are reluctant to implement a suitable code of conduct for themselves?

How do you assess political standards when politicians and their advisors at a national level continually prevent effective laws from being implemented to address their own corrupt practices?

If you despair at the corruption, incompetence and indifference within and between organisations, you are certainly not alone.

How do you assess feelings of despair in your own mind and other people's minds?

Australian voters urgently require suitably courteous parliamentary candidates to be presented for the accurate assessment of voters.

How do you assess whether corrupt political organisations are capable of providing such candidates?

What is currently funding your lifestyle, and how do you account for your assessments of income, savings, investments and expenditure? 

Over recent years, there has been much evidence of growing economic inequality in the world, including in Australia.

Yet most assessments of such inequality are inadequate.  They focus on money and its absence or prevalence, and the fluctuating market value of assets.  They tend to ignore the social, cultural, political and environmental conditions associated with structural inequality and institutional racism.

How do you usually assess civility and rudeness in relation to money?

How do you assess economic inequality in Australia?

How do you assess the income and wealth of families in Australia?

There are many factors to consider when assessing whether wealth, income and expenditure are associated with civility, including age, needs and obligations.

How do you assess the matters apparently mattering most to most Australians?

How scientifically do you assess civility, particularly in relation to Australian politics

How do you assess civility in the scientific community, within Australia and internationally? 

What do you know about civility in relation to the recording and reporting of science

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