
Kingswood High School Appears to Care, but Fails to Protect
The photograph was taken on R U OK? Day. It shows smiles, shared meals, drinks, and a public display of concern for student wellbeing.

When Deputy Principal Simon Szymkow Forgot Fairness
This story is not just about one student or one deputy principal; it is about a culture that allows authority to operate without truth. Until educators and administrators are held to the same standards of honesty and integrity that they expect from their students, history will keep repeating itself — not as stolen children, but as stolen fairness.

Dhan Dhan Guru Amar Das Ji
This blog reflects on Guru Amar Das Ji’s shabad “ਸਤੀਆ ਏਹਿ ਨ ਆਖੀਅਨਿ…”, which quietly dismantles the idea that virtue lies in death or suffering. Rooted in the Sikh vision where all souls are the bride and Akal Purakh alone is the Husband, it affirms dignity, life, and ethical living as the true measure of worth. In doing so, it honours a Guru whose clarity restored equality without argument. ਧੰਨ ਧੰਨ ਗੁਰੂ ਅਮਰ ਦਾਸ ਜੀ

Section 223: How Power Became Arbitrary?
After a successful court appearance, Marium Marium was issued a licence suspension under Section 223 without medical review or lawful grounds. She has lodged a formal complaint with NSW Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon, now under assessment by the Professional Standards Unit. The case raises questions about procedural fairness and the use of discretionary police powers toward individuals with stable medical conditions.

When Conscience Wears the Robe - Magistrate R Wong
On 20 November 2025, during R v MARIUM – OPEN (2025/00237982) at Blacktown Local Court, NSW Magistrate Rachael Wong demonstrated exceptional fairness and integrity. Despite pressure from prosecutors, she upheld the principles of justice by ensuring a self-represented defendant received a fair opportunity to prepare their case. Her conduct stood as a reminder that true justice depends not on power or position, but on conscience and courage.

Rewarding Fraud: Open Season for Australian Migration Agents
In Sharma v Minister (SYG1613/2023), accused migration agents avoided joinder. A human rights defender warns this leaves victims without meaningful remedies.

From Directions to Decision Shortcut: A Failure of Natural Justice
On 25 Sept 2025, a matter listed as a directions hearing was turned into a determination without notice. Submissions from the Minister and proposed respondents arrived less than 24 hours before. Natural justice denied, echoing a failure that risks leaving future generations burdened with stolen rights and fairness.

National Security or Religious Persecution? Hindu Govt Under Fire
Trent Franks condemns India’s Hindu government for banning Sikh pilgrimage, calling it hypocrisy and a violation of faith rights.

Silencing the Wunna Nyiyaparli
The story of the Wunna Nyiyaparli native title claim shows how procedural shortcuts silenced a people. From the separate question trap (2015) to the one-sided verdict (2016) and the 2018 consent determination, this case exposes the gap between apology and justice in Australia.