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Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again (Read 33438 times)
GordyL
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #75 - May 26th, 2016 at 9:41am
 
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:29am:
GordyL wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:13am:
aquascoot wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 7:28am:
The dux of the school at yarrabah (a community near cairns) could not pass the test to get a job at Mcdonalds.

Currently the spend per aboriginal child on education is 28,000 or over 2 and 1/2 times the spend on other kids.


Just heard a great interview on ABC radio, I'll try find a link later but something about how an Indigenous education foundation was targeting the brightest kids in these communities and fully funding them to be sent away to the countries best boarding schools. (wink wink who's mentioned this about 10 times in this thread).

Most of the kids do really will and will probably end up in a position to go back to their communities and become real leaders.


GordyL is an evident bigot and racist blind to rationality and logic.

People from deprived communities who are educated don't go back to those communities because there are no opportunities for advancement in those societies and the gravity of the deprivation pulls them back into the state of deprivation.



I'm advocating kids be given fully paid spots in the best schools in Australia.  The world needs more racists like me
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Laugh till you cry
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #76 - May 26th, 2016 at 9:52am
 
GordyL wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:41am:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:29am:
GordyL wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:13am:
aquascoot wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 7:28am:
The dux of the school at yarrabah (a community near cairns) could not pass the test to get a job at Mcdonalds.

Currently the spend per aboriginal child on education is 28,000 or over 2 and 1/2 times the spend on other kids.


Just heard a great interview on ABC radio, I'll try find a link later but something about how an Indigenous education foundation was targeting the brightest kids in these communities and fully funding them to be sent away to the countries best boarding schools. (wink wink who's mentioned this about 10 times in this thread).

Most of the kids do really will and will probably end up in a position to go back to their communities and become real leaders.


GordyL is an evident bigot and racist blind to rationality and logic.

People from deprived communities who are educated don't go back to those communities because there are no opportunities for advancement in those societies and the gravity of the deprivation pulls them back into the state of deprivation.



I'm advocating kids be given fully paid spots in the best schools in Australia.  The world needs more racists like me


So that the children of Australia's GordyL racists and bigots can abuse and torment them?
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ian
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #77 - May 26th, 2016 at 9:59am
 
aquascoot wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:24am:
[
the white public service gravy train will call this "a new stolen generation".
the white public service aboriginal industry (which has spent 100 billion since gough created it) will never give up their power.
their power is dependant on labelling anyone who wants to truly help aborigines (you and me) as racist whilst continuing to amass their public sector super and go "tsk tsk"
Exactly.
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Laugh till you cry
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #78 - May 26th, 2016 at 10:30am
 
ian wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:59am:
aquascoot wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 9:24am:
[
the white public service gravy train will call this "a new stolen generation".
the white public service aboriginal industry (which has spent 100 billion since gough created it) will never give up their power.
their power is dependant on labelling anyone who wants to truly help aborigines (you and me) as racist whilst continuing to amass their public sector super and go "tsk tsk"
Exactly.


The possibility that Aquatrousers and ian want to help Aboriginals: Fat chance.

These are two of the biggest bigots and racists on Ozpolitic.
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Gnads
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #79 - May 26th, 2016 at 11:30am
 
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 8:53pm:
Aboriginals are at Aurukun because there has been a longstanding (since 1788) policy of dispossession and exclusion from white society.

"As ye sow, so shall ye reap."

The principle of exclusion from closet pom society is now a part of Aboriginal culture.


Rubbish they are there because that's their country & that's where they want to be .....

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Gnads
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #80 - May 26th, 2016 at 11:43am
 
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 9:04pm:
Lionel Edriess wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 9:00pm:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 8:53pm:
Aboriginals are at Aurukun because there has been a longstanding (since 1788) policy of dispossession and exclusion from white society.

"As ye sow, so shall ye reap."

The principle of exclusion from closet pom society is now a part of Aboriginal culture.


Oh, I can see that!

The Aboriginal population in Tasmania has seen a dramatic increase in the last 150 years as a result of 'exclusionist' policy.

You're misnamed!

You're a laugh a minute!


Lionel Edriess may rejoice, laugh and joke about genocide and extermination of people. Decent moral people don't see it as humorous. Quite the contrary.

An increase of one from total extermination is dramatic.

A genocide of total extermination and extinction was perpetrated by closet poms in Tasmania.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truganini

Quote:
Fanny Cochrane Smith (1834–1905), outlived Truganini by 30 years and in 1889 was officially recognised as the last full-blood Tasmanian Aboriginal. Smith recorded songs in her native language, the only audio recordings that exist of an indigenous Tasmanian language


You can't make up your mind ... in one breath you're on about exclusionist policy then you talk about Tasmania & the last full blood aboriginal ... whilst the descendants  of such have been integrated into society.

If you want to maintain the premise of full blood Aboriginal then you will have to exclude them because they will mix with other races and dilute their Aboriginal blood line.

Funny how that exclusionist policy has seen  the increase of people in Australia who identify as Aboriginal or Islander ... even the blonde,blue eyed variety.

Oh yeah & that's because of deliberate govt. policy to breed them out isn't it?  Roll Eyes
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Gnads
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #81 - May 26th, 2016 at 11:49am
 
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 9:43pm:
Aboriginals have deep resentment at their dispossession and exclusion from society. A change in their social circumstances and place in society is a long haul requiring the nurturing of Aboriginal leadership to take control over their society.

The evident solution is for the government to invoke a genuine policy of inclusion and empowerment. Aboriginals need to be fully included in closet pom society not the blatantly false, patronizing, policies of the past.

The problem appears intractable from the white man's aspect because no serious attempt to include Aboriginals in society has ever been made.

The only way it can ever be solved is by enabling Aboriginals to solve it themselves.

Closet poms poisoned Aboriginal society by displacing the social structures that existed before the settlement of Australia. Nothing replaced the previous social structures which gives rise to the anarchy of today. New social structures need to be developed that link and include Aboriginals in mainstream closet pom society.


Commonly called a "chip on your shoulder" ... instilled into them to this very day by their parents & making them a continuation of the victimhood industry.

So ironic when you have youths & younger ones calling people Captain Cook White Tnuc when they have a large percentage of Capt. Cook in their background.
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Mr Hammer
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #82 - May 26th, 2016 at 11:54am
 
Gnads wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 11:49am:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 9:43pm:
Aboriginals have deep resentment at their dispossession and exclusion from society. A change in their social circumstances and place in society is a long haul requiring the nurturing of Aboriginal leadership to take control over their society.

The evident solution is for the government to invoke a genuine policy of inclusion and empowerment. Aboriginals need to be fully included in closet pom society not the blatantly false, patronizing, policies of the past.

The problem appears intractable from the white man's aspect because no serious attempt to include Aboriginals in society has ever been made.

The only way it can ever be solved is by enabling Aboriginals to solve it themselves.

Closet poms poisoned Aboriginal society by displacing the social structures that existed before the settlement of Australia. Nothing replaced the previous social structures which gives rise to the anarchy of today. New social structures need to be developed that link and include Aboriginals in mainstream closet pom society.


Commonly called a "chip on your shoulder" ... instilled into them to this very day by their parents & making them a continuation of the victimhood industry.

So ironic when you have youths & younger ones calling people Captain Cook White Tnuc when they have a large percentage of Capt. Cook in their background.

Oh well. They'll soon be teaching and treating their own kids when the whities abandon ship.
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Raven
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #83 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:22pm
 
Panther wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:06am:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 25th, 2016 at 8:53pm:
Aboriginals are at Aurukun because there has been a longstanding (since 1788) policy of dispossession and exclusion from white society.

"As ye sow, so shall ye reap."

The principle of exclusion from closet pom society is now a part of Aboriginal culture.


That confirms that the Australian Aboriginal's genetic makeup is severely flawed, & inferior to that of other Aboriginal peoples world wide because, in all that time, they have failed to advance beyond a 'victimized' stage of development, unlike like most all the other dominated races in vanquished lands that have mastered their prior limitations through innovation, & advanced by overcoming societal roadblocks while strengthening their cultures.


Possibly, but consider this.

Australia is the only Commonwealth nation not to have a treaty with it's original inhabitants.

It was considered far easier to impose the concept of Terra Nullius.

Although Commonwealth law was supposed to afford (in theory) equal rights to Aboriginal people, their rights were severely restricted.

In fact you had to be issued a piece of paper to prove to others that you were entitled equal rights.

It looked something like this

...

In order to have the same rights as white people in our country they had to first be issued this exemption and then show it on demand to any who asked for it.

Even then many were denied that which was theirs by right.
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Quoth the Raven "Nevermore"

Raven would rather ask questions that may never be answered, then accept answers which must never be questioned.
 
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #84 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:32pm
 
Institutionalised racism: Things Aboriginal people are tired of hearing

"Not being racist or anything but ..."

"Do you pay rent or did you get that house for free?"

"What year did the last aboriginal tasmanian die?"

"I am not racist, I went to school with a Darkie"

"Are you like, a proper, real life Aborigine. Cos I've never met one before"

"Get over it"

"You sure your Aboriginal? You don't have a flat nose"

"But you speak really well for an aboriginal person"

"So do you have people in your family that are like, BLACKER than you?"

"So, you get money from the government, right?"

"Go to school the Aboriginal way cos you'll never make it the white way"

"You're really pretty for an Aboriginal"

"Stop obsessing over the past."

"But we don't think of you as Aboriginal, you're normal."

"You get all the benefits"

"I know you're Aboriginal but you're not like those other ones"
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Quoth the Raven "Nevermore"

Raven would rather ask questions that may never be answered, then accept answers which must never be questioned.
 
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Mr Hammer
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #85 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:41pm
 
Raven wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:32pm:
Institutionalised racism: Things Aboriginal people are tired of hearing

"Not being racist or anything but ..."

"Do you pay rent or did you get that house for free?"

"What year did the last aboriginal tasmanian die?"

"I am not racist, I went to school with a Darkie"

"Are you like, a proper, real life Aborigine. Cos I've never met one before"

"Get over it"

"You sure your Aboriginal? You don't have a flat nose"

"But you speak really well for an aboriginal person"

"So do you have people in your family that are like, BLACKER than you?"

"So, you get money from the government, right?"

"Go to school the Aboriginal way cos you'll never make it the white way"

"You're really pretty for an Aboriginal"

"Stop obsessing over the past."

"But we don't think of you as Aboriginal, you're normal."

"You get all the benefits"

"I know you're Aboriginal but you're not like those other ones"
Isn't this thread about a lawless and out of control aboriginal community? We've gotten off track.
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Laugh till you cry
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #86 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:47pm
 
The misconduct of the closet poms continues:

http://theconversation.com/indigenous-reconciliation-in-australia-still-a-bridge...

Quote:
The effects of more than 200 years of dispossession, racism and discrimination have left many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with low levels of education, an inability to gain meaningful employment, over-representated in the prison system, and appalling housing conditions.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation.  Michael Coghlan/Flickr, CC BY-SA
Too many recommendations made for and by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over decades have never been acted on. Instead, poorly designed policies made on their behalf are funded and enacted.

More weighty and bewildering government reports will not assist reconciliation, and even if they make governments feel like something is being done.

But it’s not all bleak. Community-led movements such as Change the Record, Just Reinvest NSW and Empowered Communities are all working, in different ways, to tackle Indigenous disadvantage.

Part of their success comes from changing the way Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s issues are talked about and addressed – from one of deficit in which people are described as problematic to one of empowerment and strength.

A deep need

Reconciliation is not an outcome or a goal as much as a relationship and an ongoing journey. It’s vital for the long-term well-being of settler nations – for their identity, history, polity and nationhood.

But whatever its terms or whoever its participants, reconciliation will be no more than a series of slogans if settler Australians cannot come to a just understanding with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.

It’s now 25 years since the establishment of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, now Reconciliation Australia. That’s 25 years since Australia started a national conversation about how to become reconciled, equitable and just.

There have been many achievements, disappointments and challenges since then in the process of healing the deep rift between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

But despite all the backlashes, put-downs, trivialisation and wedge politics, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have come back stronger, more articulate, more practical, more resilient and surer of their capacity to contribute. And they’re also surer of what they expect from their contribution.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation. It’s time to make it happen.
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Please don't thank me. Effusive fawning and obeisance of disciples, mendicants, and foot-kissers embarrass me.
 
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Mr Hammer
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #87 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:52pm
 
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:47pm:
The misconduct of the closet poms continues:

http://theconversation.com/indigenous-reconciliation-in-australia-still-a-bridge...

Quote:
The effects of more than 200 years of dispossession, racism and discrimination have left many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with low levels of education, an inability to gain meaningful employment, over-representated in the prison system, and appalling housing conditions.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation.  Michael Coghlan/Flickr, CC BY-SA
Too many recommendations made for and by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over decades have never been acted on. Instead, poorly designed policies made on their behalf are funded and enacted.

More weighty and bewildering government reports will not assist reconciliation, and even if they make governments feel like something is being done.

But it’s not all bleak. Community-led movements such as Change the Record, Just Reinvest NSW and Empowered Communities are all working, in different ways, to tackle Indigenous disadvantage.

Part of their success comes from changing the way Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s issues are talked about and addressed – from one of deficit in which people are described as problematic to one of empowerment and strength.

A deep need

Reconciliation is not an outcome or a goal as much as a relationship and an ongoing journey. It’s vital for the long-term well-being of settler nations – for their identity, history, polity and nationhood.

But whatever its terms or whoever its participants, reconciliation will be no more than a series of slogans if settler Australians cannot come to a just understanding with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.

It’s now 25 years since the establishment of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, now Reconciliation Australia. That’s 25 years since Australia started a national conversation about how to become reconciled, equitable and just.

There have been many achievements, disappointments and challenges since then in the process of healing the deep rift between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

But despite all the backlashes, put-downs, trivialisation and wedge politics, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have come back stronger, more articulate, more practical, more resilient and surer of their capacity to contribute. And they’re also surer of what they expect from their contribution.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation. It’s time to make it happen.
I wish I could blame my conduct on things that happened hundreds of years ago.
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Laugh till you cry
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #88 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:54pm
 
Mr Hammer wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:52pm:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:47pm:
The misconduct of the closet poms continues:

http://theconversation.com/indigenous-reconciliation-in-australia-still-a-bridge...

Quote:
The effects of more than 200 years of dispossession, racism and discrimination have left many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with low levels of education, an inability to gain meaningful employment, over-representated in the prison system, and appalling housing conditions.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation.  Michael Coghlan/Flickr, CC BY-SA
Too many recommendations made for and by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over decades have never been acted on. Instead, poorly designed policies made on their behalf are funded and enacted.

More weighty and bewildering government reports will not assist reconciliation, and even if they make governments feel like something is being done.

But it’s not all bleak. Community-led movements such as Change the Record, Just Reinvest NSW and Empowered Communities are all working, in different ways, to tackle Indigenous disadvantage.

Part of their success comes from changing the way Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s issues are talked about and addressed – from one of deficit in which people are described as problematic to one of empowerment and strength.

A deep need

Reconciliation is not an outcome or a goal as much as a relationship and an ongoing journey. It’s vital for the long-term well-being of settler nations – for their identity, history, polity and nationhood.

But whatever its terms or whoever its participants, reconciliation will be no more than a series of slogans if settler Australians cannot come to a just understanding with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.

It’s now 25 years since the establishment of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, now Reconciliation Australia. That’s 25 years since Australia started a national conversation about how to become reconciled, equitable and just.

There have been many achievements, disappointments and challenges since then in the process of healing the deep rift between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

But despite all the backlashes, put-downs, trivialisation and wedge politics, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have come back stronger, more articulate, more practical, more resilient and surer of their capacity to contribute. And they’re also surer of what they expect from their contribution.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation. It’s time to make it happen.
I wish I could blame my conduct on things that happened hundreds of years ago.


I blame it on the conception of Mr. Hammer's ancestors.
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Please don't thank me. Effusive fawning and obeisance of disciples, mendicants, and foot-kissers embarrass me.
 
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Mr Hammer
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Re: Aurukun teachers evacuated.....again
Reply #89 - May 26th, 2016 at 12:57pm
 
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:54pm:
Mr Hammer wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:52pm:
Laugh till you cry wrote on May 26th, 2016 at 12:47pm:
The misconduct of the closet poms continues:

http://theconversation.com/indigenous-reconciliation-in-australia-still-a-bridge...

Quote:
The effects of more than 200 years of dispossession, racism and discrimination have left many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with low levels of education, an inability to gain meaningful employment, over-representated in the prison system, and appalling housing conditions.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation.  Michael Coghlan/Flickr, CC BY-SA
Too many recommendations made for and by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people over decades have never been acted on. Instead, poorly designed policies made on their behalf are funded and enacted.

More weighty and bewildering government reports will not assist reconciliation, and even if they make governments feel like something is being done.

But it’s not all bleak. Community-led movements such as Change the Record, Just Reinvest NSW and Empowered Communities are all working, in different ways, to tackle Indigenous disadvantage.

Part of their success comes from changing the way Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s issues are talked about and addressed – from one of deficit in which people are described as problematic to one of empowerment and strength.

A deep need

Reconciliation is not an outcome or a goal as much as a relationship and an ongoing journey. It’s vital for the long-term well-being of settler nations – for their identity, history, polity and nationhood.

But whatever its terms or whoever its participants, reconciliation will be no more than a series of slogans if settler Australians cannot come to a just understanding with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians.

It’s now 25 years since the establishment of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation, now Reconciliation Australia. That’s 25 years since Australia started a national conversation about how to become reconciled, equitable and just.

There have been many achievements, disappointments and challenges since then in the process of healing the deep rift between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians.

But despite all the backlashes, put-downs, trivialisation and wedge politics, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have come back stronger, more articulate, more practical, more resilient and surer of their capacity to contribute. And they’re also surer of what they expect from their contribution.

Reconciliation provides a legacy platform for our continued growth and prosperity as a nation. It’s time to make it happen.
I wish I could blame my conduct on things that happened hundreds of years ago.


I blame it on the conception of Mr. Hammer's ancestors.
I blame your silly posts on your defective DNA. The outcome of poor Indians rooting their cousins for multiple generations.
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