straightshooter wrote:Last week I listened to Marcia Langton on Radio National being interviewed in response to the headline that she accused No voters of being racist and stupid.
Although she denied the headline she then spoke for a good 15 minutes, largely uninterrupted, explaining just how No voters are racist and stupid.
The incongruity of this form of argument eludes a conscious understanding by most people and is a technique favoured by cultural marxists. Namely accuse your opponent of the things you are in reality doing.
I don't believe that the overwhelming majority of Australians are racist in the current understanding of the term.
Especially when one considers that, by definition, the referendum proposal is acutely racist.
There are also other matters not finding their way into popular discussion such as what is the definition of an indigenous Australian or in other words who is and who isn't indigenous.
At this point in time polling indicates it is looking like the vote will be 60% No against 40% Yes, in spite of the massive amount of corporate direct funding and indirect support.
womble wrote:The debate around it is alarming though. I think they should just scrap it.
Reasoning being it’s not closing the gap before it’s even begun.
I like the concept of doing something really big for them . Because we haven’t been great historically.
And it’s recent history too and continues today. Anyone being honest with themselves has seen some of them mistreated in their lives, growing up. Even if you didn’t partake in it personally. I’ve seen it and I do reflect on it.
They truly do deserve some kind of reckoning and celebration.
There’s no doubt they are a disadvantaged segment of society even with all goods intentions.
But you need bipartisan support otherwise we get this mess.
If we could just take some time out, postpone it, tweak it a bit. Get the discussion turned around till more people are on board with it all.
bladeracer wrote:stihl88 wrote:geoff wrote:Keep going fellas you're doing a great job of making shooters look like well rounded people of a modern world.
So no debate, rebuke or discussion on the topic from you Geoff just straight to chastisement?
The "yes" side consider the rest of to be racists and not worth talking to.
Billo wrote:stihl88 wrote:geoff wrote:Keep going fellas you're doing a great job of making shooters look like well rounded people of a modern world.
So no debate, rebuke or discussion on the topic from you Geoff just straight to chastisement?
I'm not sure why just an Advisory body has so many alarmed ?? its not like Legislation is being changed.
This ain't no treaty, the States can move down that path if they like.
Not sure that Dutton and Morrison are making the LNP any more electable
womble wrote:For me it's being ranked in the constitution as a second nations person by default.
Feels like second class citizen.
No free democracy does that. A citizen is a citizen.
This is my home. This is my land.
It should not matter how long you've been here or how many generations of your family before you. All citizens must be equal.
If some are less equal than others you don't live in a free country. No man is free unless all are.
stihl88 wrote:geoff wrote:Keep going fellas you're doing a great job of making shooters look like well rounded people of a modern world.
So no debate, rebuke or discussion on the topic from you Geoff just straight to chastisement?
geoff wrote:stihl88 wrote:geoff wrote:Keep going fellas you're doing a great job of making shooters look like well rounded people of a modern world.
So no debate, rebuke or discussion on the topic from you Geoff just straight to chastisement?
Mate I've provided plenty of rational input here
Nobody is interested in a real discussion
allthegearandnoidea wrote:That's because history is written by the victors.
This voice thing is not race based. It's about indigeneity. (See Sami in Finland- they're white )
I can't understand why anyone is threatened by an advisory committee to govt about matters relating to Aboriginal affairs
It's not like they have any power to disburse funds or make laws
If you want to see real power and money check out the multinational lobby groups that funnel money to government
The lump of coal Scomo brandished in parliament was handed to him by an "adviser " from the Minerals Council. The other side have the occasional prompting from the unions too![]()
Yep - we all get an equal say in our democracy
As for treaties, all states except NSW have already got treaty processes underway. The horse has bolted on that one
What surprises me is the ease with which both sides have been able to use scaremongering tactics so effectively
Billo wrote:For those claiming this is divisive FFS so are elections.
geoff wrote:
Because since federation our systems of government were built and designed to keep a certain group of people down.
Extraordinary discrimination requires extraordinary reparations
Oldbloke wrote:"I did a Radiocarbon dating assignment at Uni with Mungo Man which shows he was here around 42,000 years ago. The 60,000 year claim from those remains is disputed by many as seriously flawed."
Yes, i agree. Just yesterday i was talking about that. If the media repeats the lies, eventually they become "facts".
65,000 years here is just BS. Un-proven.
Lake Mungo 3
Later Thorne et al. (1999), arrived at a new estimate of 62,000 ± 6,000 years. This estimate was determined by combining data from uranium-thorium dating, electron spin resonance dating and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating of the remains and the immediately surrounding soil.[18]
However, this estimate was very controversial.[19][20][21] The lowest level of the LM3 which are as old as 43,000 years demonstrated that LM3 should not be older than the lowest layer. However, the ANU team had dated the stratum itself to be between 59,000 and 63,000 years old. The problems with using uranium-thorium dating on tooth enamel were criticised.
In 2003, Professor Bowler led a project bringing together a multi-disciplinary team of Australian expert groups (comprising four Australian universities, the NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service and the CSIRO, as well as including descendants of the Mungo people) to collaborate on a final determination of the skeleton's age. They reached a consensus that LM3 is about 40,000 years old.[22] This age largely corresponds with stratigraphic evidence using four different dating methods. The age of 40,000 years is currently the most widely accepted age for the LM3, making LM3 the second oldest modern human fossil east of India.
Mitochondrial DNA and origins
In 2001, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from the Lake Mungo 3 (LM3) skeleton was published and compared with several other sequences. It was found to have more than the expected number of sequence differences when compared to modern human DNA (CRS).[25] Comparison of the mitochondrial DNA with that of ancient and modern Aboriginal peoples led to the conclusion that Mungo Man fell outside the range of genetic variation seen in Australian Aboriginal people, and was used to support the multiregional origin of modern humans hypothesis.[25][26] These results proved politically controversial,
Further discoveries
In 1989, the skeleton of a child believed to be contemporary with Mungo man was discovered. Investigation of the remains was blocked by the 3TTG with the remains subsequently protected but remaining in-situ.[35] An adult skeleton was exposed by erosion in 2005 but by late 2006 had been completely destroyed by wind and rain. This loss resulted in the Indigenous custodians' receiving a government grant of $735,000 to survey and improve the conservation of skeletons, hearths and middens that were eroding from the dunes. Conservation is in-situ and no research is permitted.[36]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Mungo_remains