Why not tell us all a joke ... even a 'knock-knock' would be funnier.
GF,
Regarding your comments on the transcript of a meeting between Mr John Peake, concerned member of the public, and Mr Denis Hughes, Aerospace Adviser to the Minister for Defence -
http://www.ausairpower.net/APA-Note-2007-1.html
let me see if I have correctly understood what you are saying here.
From that point on, the interviewer blew any chance of engaging at a meaningful level.
Do you mean that if you don't agree with a system or process being advocated by the person you are talking with, then from that point on you should not expect to have any meaningful exchange? Notwithstanding the evidence in this whole air combat capability debate would suggest you are right, this is a pretty cynical way to look at things. If this really is the outcome of questioning a process (eg. a 'convention' or supposedly 'appropriate practice'), then how can continuous improvement practices be applied. A little bit moribund if not dysfunctional, don't you think?
As to this particular meeting, given the fairly open, free flowing discussion and candour that ensued between Mr Hughes and Mr Peake following said disagreement, as recorded in his transcript of the meeting, it looks like your observation (at least in this case) is somewhat off the mark (like, totally).
Insisting that the Minister breach convention and appropriate practice is a futile exercise and only serves to isolate the questioner/interviewer.
Reading submissions and Hansard is a "breach of convention"? Do you really believe this to be true or are you just having a bit of fun? The "appropriate practice" is not reading submissions nor Hansard? Again, really???
The fact that the DLO is out of his depth doesn't alter the fact that the Minister (any Minister) will not read findings until after debriefed by the team he selects as experts. Those experts will generally be selected under advisement by the peer user group (ie EAAF/RAN/Army etc....)
Don't you think this is a bit 'fox in the henhouse' or 'Dracula in charge of the blood bank'? Or, do you really believe this is how things should be done?
Where is the 'common sense test' in all of this and the 'testing of the evidence' which this particular Minister for Defence declared before the Australian people that he would do? How can getting both sides of an argument presented by only one side (in your vernacular 'by the peer user group') possibly be called "appropriate practice"?
Its outside of the purvue and competency of the Minister - and he/she certainly will not review submissions ahead of the review group.
This is a bit of a worry, particularly when, according to Mr Denis Hughes, "the Defence hierarchy are not experts!"
Also, I suggest the Prime Minister and the rest of the Parliament, along with most of Australia would disagree that these matters are outside "the purvue <sic>... of the Minister".
Its a nonsense to think otherwise.
You are right, this is a load of nonsense, even if it was for fun.