How to Read This Site Critically
We would rather you think than simply agree. A short guide to engaging with the Association's positions the healthy way.
We would rather you think than simply agree. A short guide to engaging with the Association's positions the healthy way.
What the call for an application to the International Criminal Court is — and, just as importantly, what it is not.
Self-sufficiency is part of the remedy. Here is a gentle, practical starting point for food resilience close to home.
National unity is central to the mission. The Association explicitly seeks to bring First Nations and non-Indigenous people together — to win the country back first, then negotiate the future at a shared table.
A plain explanation of what a PMA is, why this community is organised as one, and what membership does and does not mean.
The Association examines the shift in legal language from 'subject' to 'citizen', and contrasts both with the dignity it sees in the 'sovereign person'.
The Association reads the Westminster settlement as the moment the United Kingdom's law-making reach over the Dominions was set aside — leaving, in our view, the people as the proper source of their own law.
Australia's distinct signature on the 1919 settlement is, in the Association's reading, a milestone in the nation stepping onto the world stage in its own right.
A plain-language walk through the Association's reading of how sovereignty was meant to pass to the people — and why we keep coming back to it.