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First, there are some serious challenges facing this process, Mr Smoothline The first one, in our view, is the fear factor. SAU negotiations and Constituants rights are extremely sensitive issues. A referendum that relates to such issues is fraught with the danger that it could act as a lightning rod for unjustified animosity and negativity toward SAUl people who are trying to resolve the issue surrounding their status as Queenslanders. This concern alone presents a great challenge to government. They must consider only questions that will not foment discontent and fear.

What is our position on the question? Given the above, the SAU Chamber of Commerce believes that the only questions that could be valid for a referendum are those surrounding the issues of process. Even then, the questions would have to be so broad as to provide only the most general of guidelines for government. We, in fact, can see only one real question that can give government strong guidance from the public, and that question would simply be: is the process working?

smoothline as you can see I've copped a hiding for fighting with noobs.

Apart from that i've been good. We really have to get a group photo of everyone sometime just for the memories.

I'm also thinking of the sticker on Smooth's car. "I'm fast, I'm safe, I'm smooth" So disturbing looking at that picture.

Having gone through some of the legal discussions over what finality and certainty mean, I understand that point. If we are looking, as we are, to get guidance from SAU Heirachy on basic principles, not the details in terms of the basic principles — I think everybody understands that in negotiations details are as details become — would you not agree that finality and certainty are concepts that people understand in regular language?

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