It’s time we had a frank conversation about the Acknowledgment of Country.
Not about its cultural significance—nobody doubts the importance of recognising First Nations heritage—but about the relentless, thoughtless repetition of the ceremony in every conceivable setting, no matter how trivial.
The recent case of Shaun Turner, a street cleaner fired for objecting to a surprise Acknowledgment of Country during a routine toolbox meeting, highlights just how absurd the situation has become. Turner’s crime? Expressing surprise that a sacred practice, once reserved for significant moments, was being rolled out like a pre-recorded voicemail greeting.
Let’s be clear: Turner didn’t abuse, threaten, or belittle anyone. He questioned the overuse of something deeply meaningful. For that, he was labelled discriminatory, dragged through a formal investigation, and fired—only to be vindicated by the Fair Work Commission.
The real concern here isn’t about Turner’s comment. It’s about the bureaucratic zeal that sees value in empty performance over genuine respect. When every meeting, letter opening, and internal email begins with the same formulaic acknowledgment, it risks becoming not a tribute, but a box-ticking exercise devoid of substance. It trivialises the practice, making it feel compulsory and hollow.
Respect is not found in repetition; it’s found in sincerity. When something sacred is overused, it loses its impact. Imagine holding a minute’s silence for the fallen every time you boil the kettle. Does that enhance the meaning—or empty it?
Worse still, the enforcement of these ceremonies—without room for dissent or alternative viewpoints—flies in the face of the very freedoms we claim to uphold in modern Australia. We are told this is about inclusivity, yet those who feel differently are excluded, marginalised, or, as in Turner’s case, punished.
We must reassert the importance of meaningful dialogue. Cultural respect must never be weaponised to suppress speech, nor should ritual be elevated above reason. There’s nothing respectful about forcing someone to pretend.
Mr Turner’s victory is more than a personal vindication. It’s a wake-up call: culture is not honoured through coercion. Let’s preserve the sanctity of Acknowledgment of Country by using it wisely, sincerely, and in the right contexts—rather than cheapening it through constant, bureaucratic overuse.