I don't see it worth responding to most of that. It's not about return on investment.
flyingheritage wrote:
Now you compare that to US and UK museums and they have much better layouts and funding because they are major tourist attractions that get politcal notice and funding. ROI is easy with large crowd numbers seeing quality exhibits.
If Australia's heritage tourist market was the size of the UK's, just like having a population or GNP of the UK, then, amazingly enough, the museums might be the size of the UK's. The comparison to the US is simply an order of magnitude greater.
I'd like to see a UK or US museum director's reaction to your proposition to their greater 'political clout'.
Size for
size, they are about the same leverage. (Actually the RAF Museum has less political leverage and air force support than the RAAF Museum.)
In many ways the RAN and RAAF museums are punching above their weight - but comparing them to US and UK examples is simply expecting ten times the achievement with a tenth or a hundredth of the support of all kinds.
You are always angry about something, and it's wearing. The museums we have and the achievements of the staff and volunteers are worth celebrating, not continual complaint about. As a volunteer at the RAAF Museum myself, I don't agree with your views, and I'm not going to enter a public debate on them.
Complaining about political status quo on a forum is a waste of space. Any politician who acted on your views as expressed here wouldn't deserve to stay in office.
Regards,