Well, you really didn't answer my question dealing with the issue of privacy that can protect citizens, but that's OK. Also, my offer of sympathy had nothing to do with you living in Australia, so how did you
manage to screw that up? The issue was privacy under the law, and my guess is that there's some protection Down Under in that arena.
Meh, sorry if I came off tetchy, I didn't mean to. But my posts are in this case related to Australia and Australian Law. I've had too many Americans over the years give me some version of 'You're not free, because you can't own an AR-15' or 'You're not free, because the Constitution doesn't explicitly protect freedom of speech' for it not be be a slightly annoying itch.
Anyway...that's not your fault, and I apologise.
BTW, my wife and I almost moved to Australia back in the early 70's because I had a teaching job offered there, however my wife and I were too close to our families to make the five year minimum commitment, and we didn't have enough money to fly back and forth, especially with two little ones with us.
Hey, so imI an ex-teacher. I went up to Papua New Guinea and taught for a couple of years. Five years is a loooong commitment.
Also, I doubt they were sending US teachers to the schools all the Australian teachers wanted to teach at. More likely the tough schools.
That's what Aussie teachers going to London always copped, at least.
As the saying goes, the grass appears greener on the other side of the fence, but I read later that around 80% of those educators who took the government's offer returned back to the States.
Makes sense. I moved to New Zealand for work, and loved the place, but Australia was home.
I would say Australia in the seventies was quite different to now. More isolated, more cultural centre, less diverse. Some might prefer that, I guess, but we're a bit more grown up now I think. I got offered a job in the States last year, and might have considered more seriously depending on where exactly it was based. It's harder with school aged kids though.
And then there was an offer to teach in Fairbanks, Alaska, so I asked my wife who's from Sicily if she was interested, and I betcha you can guess what her response was.
Funny...that's so exotic to an Australian I'd probably have jumped at it, long as it was finite.