withoutaface said:
Nor are the government [mind-readers]. If more people want USU then more should have protested, and if the SRC wanted the government to think everyone was genuine they (or the Union, can't remember which did this, but it's kinda irrelevant anyway) shouldn't have provided free food, bands and comedians to bribe people into protesting. I contacted Rose the best part of a week ago with this concern and she hasn't responded.
The government is not passing VSU because they feel they are representing the interests of the majority who did not protest against VSU. Their legislative history shows they don't really have the best interests of students at heart, financially or otherwise. If the government was serious about establishing whether VSU has majority support on campus, they would accept the demand for a binding student referendum on VSU that has been put forward by the SRC. Rose was probably a bad example, she is very busy and probably doesn't reply to a reasonable proportion of emails, so I probably shouldn't have used her email as a specific example. But with that said, the SRC is generally quite an accessible body, even to first-years (like me).
Not-That-Bright said:
hahahaha BS the SRC isn't iscolated from others views.
They see any right-wing views as fascism or some other evil buzz word, they wouldn't listen to any group of students who opposed their view.
Many students are angry over the unions protesting, but they probably just hang around their leftist social clique, so they wouldn't know this
That view has not been publicised at all on campus, though. Personally, I have seen two pro-VSU chalkings, neither of which was actually directed at the SRC. It's not like those students have attempted to organise a pro-VSU action and were shut down by the SRC. If you want a democratic body to represent your views as a citizen, you have to get involved, there is no other way. When was the last time your local MP rang you up and asked you what you thought about certain issues, just to make sure he was reflecting the views of the whole electorate? It doesn't happen, because it's not practical. There are tens of thousands of undergrads at USyd. Having no policy, "because there will be some people who oppose it, even if they don't speak up", is a pretty useless outcome.
I also think it's a bit ironic how you say the SRC disregards everyone else's views because they are always stereotyping the opposition as "fascist"; and then in the very next sentence stereotype the entire SRC as members of a "leftist social clique"! I'm not sure if you've ever been to SRC meetings, but they are definitely not a homogenous bloc. There are a lot of Liberal and Labor Right students on Council, and there is often just as much dissent between Labor Left and the Broad Left (ie. Greens etc) as there is between Left and Right. Basically, all parts of the political spectrum are represented there, so don't fall into the same trap you (erroneously) accuse the SRC of being in. It is in fact a measure of the opposition to VSU within the wider higher education sector that anti-VSU protests can be organised by people like Sam Crosby, the Union President who is definitely not a far leftist.