[quote=Vortex] Whoa the first purple! [/quote] I was expecting to be purple before I took I test. I suppose that I was blue as a consequence of my declining trust in the capability of the people to make the decisions that are best for them. What I think about the 'legalization of racism' in Australia: It's ludicrous that it was ever illegal in the first place. Before you told me that it's just now being made legal I was sceptical of whether it was ever illegal, and to be honest I still am now. The idea that a thought, especially one completely unexpressed, should be illegal (or even subject to law at all) is absurd. People are free to believe whatever they like, far and beyond racism. To press, I think that the expression of racism should also be legal. To answer Vortex's question on the last page, "Why should somebody in a minority have to put up with all the crap they receive from the white majority?", my answer would be because the majority is the majority, and Australia is a democratic country. What I think about immigration, which is the real issue in Australia that racism stems from: Immigration is a necessary process. However, it's a massively disadvantageous necessity in regards not only to the economic damage it does to the countries affected by widespread emigration (e.g., brain drain), but also for its erosion of the fundamental character of the country affected by widespread immigration. Immigration shouldn't be an overwhelming, demographic-altering affair. It's needed for short-term growth, but can be catastrophic in the long-term if it's not regulated correctly. Immigrants should only be admitted to the extent that they can be advantageously absorbed.