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Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day (Read 2954 times)
Jasin
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Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Jan 25th, 2024 at 10:49pm
 
Well it's the 26th of January now.
So Happy SOUTH LAND Day to celebrate 'Politics' in this part of the world that was put into place by the British...

...and is now being undermined by the Media of Entertainment and Music (in other words 'Italy') that rules America with its FAKE POLITICS of Roman Republics and Athenian Democracies of 'old'.

How do you feel?
Do you feel like a Tootheys or two??
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Jasin
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #1 - Jan 25th, 2024 at 11:02pm
 
SHAME, SHAME, SHAME !!!
Only Americans take pride in themselves - patriotism.

Peter Dutton - part of the New Pride Australians emerging?

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/australians-shouldn-t-be-ashamed-of-who-we-...
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Bias_2012
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #2 - Jan 25th, 2024 at 11:25pm
 
It got off to a good start with Captain Cook sawn off at his ankles



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Our Lives Are Governed By The Feast & Famine Variable
 
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Jasin
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #3 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 12:38am
 
I thought he was speared in his syphilis?
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #4 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 12:11pm
 
How hundreds of thousands of Australians spend their Australia/Invasion/Genocide/HAMAS Day!


https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/thousands-to-attend-invasion-day-protes...
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #5 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 12:17pm
 
Opera House come Light House puts photos of modern Aborigine peoples from the extinct Eora tribe to represent Anti-Immigration Day.

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/sydney-opera-house-lit-up-on-australia-day/...
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #6 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 2:13pm
 
Jasin wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 12:17pm:
Opera House come Light House puts photos of modern Aborigine peoples from the extinct Eora tribe to represent Anti-Immigration Day.

https://www.msn.com/en-au/news/other/sydney-opera-house-lit-up-on-australia-day/...


...


Jasin will be all right once we finish taking the piste out of him - ski-ing accident...
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #7 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm
 

Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania—united
to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes

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Jasin
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #8 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:30pm
 
Narrrrrrrrrgh maaaaaaaaate.
As today is recognized as INVASION DAY and only white old Pensioners still recognise it as AUSTRALIA DAY.
Changing the date to the 25th of April keeps it in alignment with INVASION DAY on many levels.

I bet they cancel Australia Day next year and 'officially' accept it as INVASION DAY regardless of what actual date it's on.

BLACK DOG GUILT ON EVIL WHITE PEOPLE.


Black Americans get free white pussy.
Black Australians get free white money.
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #9 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm
 
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania
—united
to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it?  Austrlia as we know it started on 26 Januar 1788.

Every significant date in the history of the country as a counry is a result of that day because that is the first day of Australia as a country.

Don't reject it, don't repudiate it. It was not 'invasion day'. The survival of the first fleet was touch and go. Hardly a fleet of 'invaders'.


the stupid cynicism about losing a public holiday is just parochial, small-time ratbaggery.






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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #10 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 7:04pm
 
Invasion Day is the exploitation of Aborigines by the Media to undermine anything British here in this Country.

And empower the Lefty Woke Media Culture to take control of Politics with such things as the Voice.
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #11 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 8:39pm
 
.
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truth_26.jpg (29 KB | 24 )
truth_26.jpg

“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #12 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:06pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania
—united
to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it?  Austrlia as we know it started on 26 Januar 1788.

Every significant date in the history of the country as a counry is a result of that day because that is the first day of Australia as a country.

Don't reject it, don't repudiate it. It was not 'invasion day'. The survival of the first fleet was touch and go. Hardly a fleet of 'invaders'.


the stupid cynicism about losing a public holiday is just parochial, small-time ratbaggery.








Just cut to the chase frank,  So you like cream on your donuts
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #13 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:26pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 [highlight]when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria,

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it? 



Do you celebrate your birthday the day you were born or the day your mum pulled her knickers down and said yes? Why ignore it.
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I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #14 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:44pm
 
John Smith: "Blubba blubba. Blur blur!  Tongue"
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #15 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:53pm
 
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:26pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 [highlight]when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria,

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it? 



Do you celebrate your birthday the day you were born or the day your mum pulled her knickers down and said yes? Why ignore it.

A moronic angle, just as we have come to expect from you, thicko bozo.
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #16 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:56pm
 
BigP wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:06pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania
—united
to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it?  Austrlia as we know it started on 26 Januar 1788.

Every significant date in the history of the country as a counry is a result of that day because that is the first day of Australia as a country.

Don't reject it, don't repudiate it. It was not 'invasion day'. The survival of the first fleet was touch and go. Hardly a fleet of 'invaders'.


the stupid cynicism about losing a public holiday is just parochial, small-time ratbaggery.




Just cut to the chase frank,  So you like cream on your donuts


Oh, thicko Smith's cuz is with us!  Yay! On acres!  With kiddies. In Auckland.
The joy.

Love the wife beating moustache, Big Pussy.

...
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John Smith
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #17 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:11pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:53pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:26pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 [highlight]when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria,

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it? 



Do you celebrate your birthday the day you were born or the day your mum pulled her knickers down and said yes? Why ignore it.

A moronic angle, just as we have come to expect from you, thicko bozo.


About as moronic as your original argument dumbarse,  which was the whole point  Cheesy
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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BigP
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #18 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:17pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:56pm:
BigP wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:06pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania
—united
to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it?  Austrlia as we know it started on 26 Januar 1788.

Every significant date in the history of the country as a counry is a result of that day because that is the first day of Australia as a country.

Don't reject it, don't repudiate it. It was not 'invasion day'. The survival of the first fleet was touch and go. Hardly a fleet of 'invaders'.


the stupid cynicism about losing a public holiday is just parochial, small-time ratbaggery.




Just cut to the chase frank,  So you like cream on your donuts


Oh, thicko Smith's cuz is with us!  Yay! On acres!  With kiddies. In Auckland.
The joy.

Love the wife beating moustache, Big Pussy.

https://www.ozpolitic.com/yabbfiles/avatars/UserAvatars/BigP.jpg


lol, That's a great pic, I wish i had beaten her a bit more lol , But now you are the biggest bitch here ill start  whippin on you, , Just to be Frank
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Frank
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #19 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:22pm
 
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:11pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:53pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:26pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 [highlight]when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria,

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it? 



Do you celebrate your birthday the day you were born or the day your mum pulled her knickers down and said yes? Why ignore it.

A moronic angle, just as we have come to expect from you, thicko bozo.


About as moronic as your original argument dumbarse,  which was the whole point  Cheesy

So you ARE putting forward moronic arguments, thicko, effortlessly, naturally.  And you swivel your eyes in triumph!! You are stupid like the lark is happy. No effort. In your natures.

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Frank
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #20 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:23pm
 
BigP wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:17pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:56pm:
BigP wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:06pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland,
South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania
—united
to form the Commonwealth of Australia.

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it?  Austrlia as we know it started on 26 Januar 1788.

Every significant date in the history of the country as a counry is a result of that day because that is the first day of Australia as a country.

Don't reject it, don't repudiate it. It was not 'invasion day'. The survival of the first fleet was touch and go. Hardly a fleet of 'invaders'.


the stupid cynicism about losing a public holiday is just parochial, small-time ratbaggery.




Just cut to the chase frank,  So you like cream on your donuts


Oh, thicko Smith's cuz is with us!  Yay! On acres!  With kiddies. In Auckland.
The joy.

Love the wife beating moustache, Big Pussy.

https://www.ozpolitic.com/yabbfiles/avatars/UserAvatars/BigP.jpg


lol, That's a great pic, I wish i had beaten her a bit more lol , But now you are the biggest bitch here ill start  whippin on you, , Just to be Frank

Why not finish grade 4 first?
There's a worthwhile goal for you.

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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #21 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:28pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:22pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:11pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:53pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:26pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 [highlight]when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria,

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it? 



Do you celebrate your birthday the day you were born or the day your mum pulled her knickers down and said yes? Why ignore it.

A moronic angle, just as we have come to expect from you, thicko bozo.


About as moronic as your original argument dumbarse,  which was the whole point  Cheesy

So you ARE putting forward moronic arguments, thicko, effortlessly, naturally.  And you swivel your eyes in triumph!! You are stupid like the lark is happy. No effort. In your natures.



""You are stupid like the lark is happy. No effort. In your natures.""


The Shakespeare of Ozpol lol
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #22 - Jan 26th, 2024 at 11:14pm
 
What did I do for Australia Day?  Stayed home in the air con with solar on the roof - place where all the home help love to come to work.... hung some washing out and watched it dry in five minutes.... had a nap in the p.m.    Had a drive down the lake to see the Big Pardy, Errol ... still going at 7pm... checked the two blokes who live side by side - one with the Abo flag and one with the Ozflag... the Abo one is gone... maybe he moved or died.... they were just two mates taking the piss out of one another... an Australian tradition.
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #23 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 6:45am
 
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:22pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 10:11pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:53pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 9:26pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:58pm:
AusGeoff wrote on Jan 26th, 2024 at 6:23pm:
Obviously 'Australia Day' should be celebrated on 1 January.

Australia became a nation on 1 January 1901 [highlight]when the six
British colonies—New South Wales, Victoria,

     It'll never happen though simply because most of
     our slackarse Aussie workers wouldn't wanna lose
     their New Year's day holiday.    Roll Eyes




And those colonies - were they here from time immemorial?  or was there a start to them? Why ignore it? 



Do you celebrate your birthday the day you were born or the day your mum pulled her knickers down and said yes? Why ignore it.

A moronic angle, just as we have come to expect from you, thicko bozo.


About as moronic as your original argument dumbarse,  which was the whole point  Cheesy

So you ARE putting forward moronic arguments, thicko, effortlessly, naturally.  And you swivel your eyes in triumph!! You are stupid like the lark is happy. No effort. In your natures.


I put forward YOUR argument,  but in a different scenario specifically to highlight just how moronic you are Cheesy
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #24 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:36am
 
At the turn of this century, amid growing progressive and Indigenous hostility towards January 26, then NSW premier Bob Carr penned an impassioned defence of the rightness of the date as our national holiday.

Bob Carr presaged the national self-loathing behind the campaign to axe January 26 with an honest and historically based ­argument in support of the status quo. His piece argued that like any colonised country, Australia’s history was not without brutality or pain, but that none of that hardship could be air-brushed via some symbolic adjustment to the holiday calendar.

Carr also stated that all citizens in the modern nation created by the arrival of the English had benefited collectively from the introduction of the rule of law, noting that it was English law that saw the seven perpetrators of the Myall Creek massacre hanged for the murder of 28 Aboriginal men, women and children in 1838.

“January 26 is the day the whole brave, self-mocking, patient, largely successful exercise in nation-building began,” Carr wrote in Sydney’s The Daily Telegraph on January 22, 2000.

“It is the one day that speaks of all that happened: the good and bad, the inspiring and shaming. The story of us all.

There is no alternative. It is altogether appropriate. Well used, it will tell future generations what really happened – the brutality, the heroism, the tenderness, the patience. It will teach the ­humility as well as pride. Advance the Australian fair go and its inevitable symbol, Australia Day. There is no other day that says it all.”





We must never give in to the noisy, stupid ratbags who stand only for cancel culture, resentment, statue toppling, shouty vandalism.
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #25 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:55pm
 
Australia as a nation only came into existence on 1 January 1901 when the former colonies voted to become a federation.  Australia Day was until 1988 not a national holiday, before that date, it was celebrated by the states/colonies whenever the local government decreed it suitable.  Australia Day is more appropriate on 1 January compared to 26 January which is more appropriate for the establishment of New South Wales, which is only one of the seven states or territories.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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It seems that I have upset a Moderator and are forbidden from using posting to the general forum now. So much for Freedom of Speech. Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #26 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:59pm
 
There would be no 1 January 1901 without 26 January 1788.

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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #27 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 3:46pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:59pm:
There would be no 1 January 1901 without 26 January 1788.


NSW Day is on 26 January 1788.  Australia Day is more appropriately celebrated on 1 January 1901.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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It seems that I have upset a Moderator and are forbidden from using posting to the general forum now. So much for Freedom of Speech. Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #28 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 3:48pm
 
Nationality and Citizenship Act came into effect on Australia Day, 26 January 1949.  The Act introduced the principle of citizenship for Australians as belonging to Australia, rather than to Britain.
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #29 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 6:27pm
 
Despite the justification of January 1st.
Having it on New Years 'day' would have it lose its importance and lustre. In other words - it would be a 'waste' of time in the face of the more potent New Years vibe. It would be a 'silly' date to have it on regardless of the other States being incorporated.

What is really happening is that the Jan 26th being a 'Political' celebration of this country - it has been undermined by the 'Black' bitterness of 'Anti-Immigration' here, the Media/Left's support of that and the slow take-over of it being more a 'Media Culture' day more than Political. A Media/Left Culture that comes directly from the American Media's narratives.

If it is to be an 'Invasion Day'? Then April 25th (Anzac Day) is more appropriate as it can relate to Australia's 'invasions' of other nations on behalf of other nations - specifically the UK & USA. Truth hurts.

Why not place it in a part of the year that exhibits a void of days to celebrate? A long weekend, where there is a lack of at that time of the year. A would be needed respite from work for a day.

But in essence - Australia Day is the 'Political' Day for this country and thus it really should be left as it is and instead of undermining it for the Media narrative for the negative. It should be promoted more 'politically', rather than for the Entertainment/Music/Tourism industry that is usurping it.

I honestly don't think 'Aborigines' dislike the 'date' or the reason behind it. But I do think that the 'Blacks' for the Media narrative - do so. Let's sort the pros from the con-jobs in this country. Say "NO" yet again, to the Media & Left's desire to once again cause division and negativity to anything in this part of the world. Especially when the Media's narrative prioritises Europe, Asia, Africa and of course - Oceania (of Big Brother 1984 fame) above that of this part of the world, N.America, S.America and the Middle-East.

What we have here, is an Enemy (Media/Left) behind our lines. Simple as that. The Media/Left need to f*uck off to Oceania next door where it belongs.
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Abos should say thanks
Reply #30 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:36pm
 
!
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #31 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:45pm
 
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:55pm:
Australia as a nation only came into existence on 1 January 1901 when the former colonies voted to become a federation.  Australia Day was until 1988 not a national holiday, before that date, it was celebrated by the states/colonies whenever the local government decreed it suitable.  Australia Day is more appropriate on 1 January compared to 26 January which is more appropriate for the establishment of New South Wales, which is only one of the seven states or territories.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



It doesn't matter what day it came together. We celebrate the Queens birthday on every day except for her actual birthday. We celebrate the birth of christ on a day that has nothing to do with his birthday.

If we can do it for jesus and the Queen we can do it for Australia 🇦🇺
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #32 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:49pm
 
If we move Australia day will these ones even know?

https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSFeYoREh/
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #33 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:36pm
 
John Smith wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:45pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:55pm:
Australia as a nation only came into existence on 1 January 1901 when the former colonies voted to become a federation.  Australia Day was until 1988 not a national holiday, before that date, it was celebrated by the states/colonies whenever the local government decreed it suitable.  Australia Day is more appropriate on 1 January compared to 26 January which is more appropriate for the establishment of New South Wales, which is only one of the seven states or territories.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



It doesn't matter what day it came together. We celebrate the Queens birthday on every day except for her actual birthday. We celebrate the birth of christ on a day that has nothing to do with his birthday.

If we can do it for jesus and the Queen we can do it for Australia 🇦🇺



What is a better day?
1 Jan 1901 doesn't include Aborigines any more 'inclusively' than 26 Jan or just as much.

What day would please Aborigines - for this agitation against 26 Jan is exclusively about Aboriginal grievance. What European date - all historical dates are European - would satisfy Aborigines?
None. The Abos complaining about 26 jan will complain about every other historical date. This is about a blanket, stupid revolt against Britishand European entry into Australia.

Abo grievance activist are speaking, even today, about 'white Australia', as if Australia was just Aborigines and whites.






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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #34 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:52pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:36pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:45pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:55pm:
Australia as a nation only came into existence on 1 January 1901 when the former colonies voted to become a federation.  Australia Day was until 1988 not a national holiday, before that date, it was celebrated by the states/colonies whenever the local government decreed it suitable.  Australia Day is more appropriate on 1 January compared to 26 January which is more appropriate for the establishment of New South Wales, which is only one of the seven states or territories.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



It doesn't matter what day it came together. We celebrate the Queens birthday on every day except for her actual birthday. We celebrate the birth of christ on a day that has nothing to do with his birthday.

If we can do it for jesus and the Queen we can do it for Australia 🇦🇺



What is a better day?



Any day other than the anniversary of their being invaded
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #35 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 9:03pm
 
John Smith wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:52pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:36pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:45pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:55pm:
Australia as a nation only came into existence on 1 January 1901 when the former colonies voted to become a federation.  Australia Day was until 1988 not a national holiday, before that date, it was celebrated by the states/colonies whenever the local government decreed it suitable.  Australia Day is more appropriate on 1 January compared to 26 January which is more appropriate for the establishment of New South Wales, which is only one of the seven states or territories.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



It doesn't matter what day it came together. We celebrate the Queens birthday on every day except for her actual birthday. We celebrate the birth of christ on a day that has nothing to do with his birthday.

If we can do it for jesus and the Queen we can do it for Australia 🇦🇺



What is a better day?



Any day other than the anniversary of their being invaded

Feb 30? Would that unite you and the Abos?



There was no 'invasion', thick ****.
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #36 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 9:10pm
 
Frank wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 9:03pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:52pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 8:36pm:
John Smith wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 7:45pm:
Brian Ross wrote on Jan 27th, 2024 at 2:55pm:
Australia as a nation only came into existence on 1 January 1901 when the former colonies voted to become a federation.  Australia Day was until 1988 not a national holiday, before that date, it was celebrated by the states/colonies whenever the local government decreed it suitable.  Australia Day is more appropriate on 1 January compared to 26 January which is more appropriate for the establishment of New South Wales, which is only one of the seven states or territories.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...  Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



It doesn't matter what day it came together. We celebrate the Queens birthday on every day except for her actual birthday. We celebrate the birth of christ on a day that has nothing to do with his birthday.

If we can do it for jesus and the Queen we can do it for Australia 🇦🇺



What is a better day?



Any day other than the anniversary of their being invaded

Feb 30? Would that unite you and the Abos?



There was no 'invasion', thick ****.


Sure there was, by asylum seekers like you
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #37 - Jan 27th, 2024 at 9:43pm
 
Imagine an Australia where the likes of Smith and all the Lefty/Media folk get what they want and destroy all that the Right and Politics has created here.

Australia would not be a place one would want to live in anymore... look at how bad it has become with them already in the driver's seat.  Roll Eyes
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #38 - Jan 29th, 2024 at 10:20am
 
Convicts in government service benefited from the shortage of skilled labour in the early years. Francis Greenway, the colony’s first architect – and a convicted ­forger – stepped straight from his transport into permanent employment. The most common gubernatorial indulgence was the ticket-of-leave – an early form of parole that gave the convict freedom, though not freedom to leave the colony. Between 1810 and 1816, some 50 per cent of male convicts who had been sentenced to seven-year terms were paroled in this fashion after they had served three years or less.

The trouble with Robert Hughes’ Fatal Shore myth of an antipodean gulag is that it’s not only an illusion, it’s an occlusion: it obscures the very real social, moral and political value in those features of the convict system that were in part a pragmatic response to economic need. We get a very different impression from the witness accounts of visitors to, and, in one rather special case, victims of the system.

In 1802, a young Frenchman named Francois Peron arrived at Sydney Harbour as part of the French “scientific” expedition commanded by Nicholas Baudin. In his journals of that voyage, Peron explicitly, though fleetingly, uses the term “revolution” to describe the mechanism of social advancement he’d witnessed first-hand at the penal colony at the end of the earth.

The mechanism of this “revolution” was, in Peron’s view, rational self-interest. The emancipated convicts were generally given land grants and starter provisions from the government stores. They were concerned with “the maintenance of order and justice, for the purposes of preserving the property they have acquired”, Peron observed.

At the same time, they “behold themselves in the situation of husbands and fathers; they have … powerful motives for becoming good members of the community in which they exist”.

Peron’s account has an English equivalent in the witness account of the 26-year-old Charles Darwin, who arrived at Sydney Cove in 1836 aboard HMS Beagle. “On the whole, as a place of punishment the object is scarcely gained, but as a means of making men outwardly honest – of converting vagabonds, most useless in one hemisphere, into active citizens in another, and thus giving birth to a new and splendid country – a grand Centre of Civilisation – it has succeeded to a degree perhaps unparalleled in history,” Darwin wrote.
...
In its broad outlines the convict experience was, as Darwin put it, about remaking, conversion and elevation. But it was, nevertheless, at heart, a form of extreme punishment for mostly petty offences. For many coveys the pursuit of freedom, despite the considerable risks, was preferable to the rigidities of indentured servitude. They escaped – even from the strictly supervised chain gangs – into the bush. Many perished there.

The reason, I think, that French observers were keen to stress the philosophical implications of the Australian revolution – the wonderfully named Hyacinthe de Bougainville also makes this point during his visit of 1825 – is that the French Revolution had been so heavily freighted with unrealised, or betrayed idealism. They were attuned to the sentiments of equality and fraternity. But they had lived through bloodshed, repression and, at the end of it all, the heady swell of Bonapartism and the restoration of a repressive monarchy. What they observed at Sydney Cove was the realisation of humane social ideas without any espousal of those ideals: a revolution without a Robes­pierre; a revolution without a guillotine.

It was not, of course, a revolution without bloodshed. Or violence, in the form of dispossession. Or murder, on both sides. But it would be facile to reduce the one story – the celebratory story with a powerful contemporary resonance – to the other. To reduce everything to black and white. Sophisticated cultures deal with complex origin stories of many strands.
Luke Slattery

Unsophisticated cultural activists, on the other hand, reduce everything to black and white, manichean good v evil.
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« Last Edit: Jan 29th, 2024 at 12:04pm by Frank »  

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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #39 - Jan 29th, 2024 at 11:44am
 
Frank wrote on Jan 29th, 2024 at 10:20am:
Convicts in government service benefited from the shortage of skilled labour in the early years. Francis Greenway, the colony’s first architect – and a convicted ­forger – stepped straight from his transport into permanent employment. The most common gubernatorial indulgence was the ticket-of-leave – an early form of parole that gave the convict freedom, though not freedom to leave the colony. Between 1810 and 1816, some 50 per cent of male convicts who had been sentenced to seven-year terms were paroled in this fashion after they had served three years or less.

The trouble with Robert Hughes’ Fatal Shore myth of an antipodean gulag is that it’s not only an illusion, it’s an occlusion: it obscures the very real social, moral and political value in those features of the convict system that were in part a pragmatic response to economic need. We get a very different impression from the witness accounts of visitors to, and, in one rather special case, victims of the system.

In 1802, a young Frenchman named Francois Peron arrived at Sydney Harbour as part of the French “scientific” expedition commanded by Nicholas Baudin. In his journals of that voyage, Peron explicitly, though fleetingly, uses the term “revolution” to describe the mechanism of social advancement he’d witnessed first-hand at the penal colony at the end of the earth.

The mechanism of this “revolution” was, in Peron’s view, rational self-interest. The emancipated convicts were generally given land grants and starter provisions from the government stores. They were concerned with “the maintenance of order and justice, for the purposes of preserving the property they have acquired”, Peron observed.

At the same time, they “behold themselves in the situation of husbands and fathers; they have … powerful motives for becoming good members of the community in which they exist”.

Peron’s account has an English equivalent in the witness account of the 26-year-old Charles Darwin, who arrived at Sydney Cove in 1836 aboard HMS Beagle. On the whole, as a place of punishment the object is scarcely gained, but as a means of making men outwardly honest – of converting vagabonds, most useless in one hemisphere, into active citizens in another, and thus giving birth to a new and splendid country – a grand Centre of Civilisation – it has succeeded to a degree perhaps unparalleled in history,” Darwin wrote.
...
In its broad outlines the convict experience was, as Darwin put it, about remaking, conversion and elevation. But it was, nevertheless, at heart, a form of extreme punishment for mostly petty offences. For many coveys the pursuit of freedom, despite the considerable risks, was preferable to the rigidities of indentured servitude. They escaped – even from the strictly supervised chain gangs – into the bush. Many perished there.

The reason, I think, that French observers were keen to stress the philosophical implications of the Australian revolution – the wonderfully named Hyacinthe de Bougainville also makes this point during his visit of 1825 – is that the French Revolution had been so heavily freighted with unrealised, or betrayed idealism. They were attuned to the sentiments of equality and fraternity. But they had lived through bloodshed, repression and, at the end of it all, the heady swell of Bonapartism and the restoration of a repressive monarchy. What they observed at Sydney Cove was the realisation of humane social ideas without any espousal of those ideals: a revolution without a Robes­pierre; a revolution without a guillotine.

It was not, of course, a revolution without bloodshed. Or violence, in the form of dispossession. Or murder, on both sides. But it would be facile to reduce the one story – the celebratory story with a powerful contemporary resonance – to the other. To reduce everything to black and white. Sophisticated cultures deal with complex origin stories of many strands.
Luke Slattery

Unsophisticated cultural activists, on the other hand, reduce everything to black and white, manichean good v evil.


Wow! I've never ever heard that or picked up on it before.

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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #40 - Jan 29th, 2024 at 12:03pm
 
The arrival of 743 British convicts at Port Jackson on January 26, 1788, is for many Australians an occasion for lamentation rather than celebration. That’s not, in itself, a bad thing. Controversy can focus the mind, and the more we debate the history of the country’s colonisation, the better. But our way of seeing these events, dominated as it is by the optic of post-colonialism and the prestige of identity politics, runs the risk of drowning out the voices of the 743 convicts who, in effect, laid the foundations for modern Australia.

There is much to celebrate in their story. It tells how a miserable convict underclass in exile went on to build a dynamic, prosperous, open and relatively egalitarian society. This had never happened before, and it hasn’t happened since.

It’s a historical story with a powerful contemporary resonance. How do contemporary societies, both developing and developed, find ways to improve and empower citizens trapped at the lower end of the social scale?  But colonial Australia found answers to the problem of social advancement when a criminal class was empowered to create a society defined by the idea of advancement and liberation. It was a social and economic revolution – a revolution without a proclamation. An accidental revolution. But a revolution nevertheless.

The chief obstacle to the dissemination of this story is the usual culprit: ignorance. To take one example: many Australians – and visitors to Australia – picture colonial Sydney and Hobart as vicious prison systems. They imagine convicts incarcerated, in leg irons, flogged for petty offences, subjected to cruel and arbitrary forms of torture.

At no stage were the run-of-the-mill convicts who went ashore at Port Jackson clapped in chains: that’s part folklore, part colonial Gothic cliche, part lazy assumption.

In 1822, the British government published the detailed report of a punctilious London lawyer named John Thomas Bigge – reputedly very small – who’d been sent to investigate the state of the convict system and suggest reforms. At their first muster the newly arrived convicts were, Bigge found, “told by the principal superintendent ‘to go and provide lodging where they could for the remainder of the day, and to come to their work in the morning’.” They weren’t chained. They weren’t imprisoned. They weren’t even confined – and they didn’t shuffle around town in leg irons.

After the hours of 3pm weekdays and on Saturdays, the convicts generally worked for themselves – fixing watches, building fences or furniture – and with their earnings they were expected to pay for their “weekly lodgings and their washing”, in Bigge’s words.

The most remarkable thing about the convict colony at the end of the earth was its air of liberality, despite the harshness of the work and the climate. Convicts were formed into various work gangs. Only hardened criminals and repeat offenders were assigned to the chain gangs.

Commissioner Bigge observed that tradesmen were generally paid “a certain weekly sum, generally amounting to 10 shillings … In return for this payment, and so long as it is regularly made, the convict is allowed to be at large at Sydney, and elsewhere, and to be at his own disposal.”
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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #41 - Jan 29th, 2024 at 12:09pm
 
It was the French who seemed the most acutely attuned to the political and moral force of the social experiment at Sydney Cove. The writer and illustrator Jacques Arago arrived in Sydney in 1819 aboard a ship commanded by Louis de Freycinet, who had smuggled his spirited wife Rose on board in the disguise of a deckhand.

Arago, too, was keen to lay bare the mechanisms of social elevation. “A convict arrives, condemned to seven years’ transportation. If he be of any trade, he may procure employment at it as soon as he arrives: and if he be industrious and frugal, he is soon enabled to work on his own account, and to earn money enough to begin a little business.”

A convict in this condition – unable to leave the colony yet free to earn wages – “is given as an assistant, or servant” in the form of a ­convict whose term has recently finished or “has been granted an exemption”. The servant’s labours are “recompensed; and, if he be frugal when his time has expired, he in his turn, obtains the same advantages as his master, and, like him, receives servants, who assist him in clearing fresh lands. In this manner the labour, the trouble, and the reward have been equally distributed; and while the country is improved, the man becomes better, and society is benefited.”

We have another early colonial narrative of personal elevation, though one that lies outside this French tradition of looking on – somewhat admiringly as Voltaire had also done – to English society from without. It’s the narrative of Joseph Mason, a convict who arrived in the colony in 1831 and returned home after an early pardon. Far from being fettered or in any sense constrained, Mason was free to roam and explore the countryside. “I have traced the (Nepean) river its whole length through the mountain both alone and with company,” he boasted.

These witness accounts of early Sydney miss much detail, some supporting their vision of a benign social revolution, some challenging it. They fail, for example, to note the tensions in the colony between ex-convict emancipists, free settlers, convicts and the military; there is only a glancing mention of the fact that many convicts spend their earnings on grog, while others return to crime. And they fail by and large to see that the sunny social experiment was made possible by an act of colonial dispossession.

Contemporary Australians, and particularly the young, tend to view the early settlement solely through the prism of colonisation and dispossession. Many others have absorbed the gulag myth propagated by Hughes, who wilfully confused the harshness of the places of secondary punishment – such as Port Arthur, Norfolk Island and Moreton Bay – with conditions and practices in the main settlements.

The untold story of the Australian revolution carries its freight – moral, political, philosophical – into our century. It suggests that individuals, and entire societies, can be improved by improving their conditions; that work and purpose are, in fact, morally uplifting.

It illuminates some of the causes of social misery, as well as some of the cures. It’s an optimistic, and a badly needed, tale.

Peron, Arago and de Bougainville were convinced they’d witnessed something worthy of philosophical reflection. Their compatriot Jules (20,000 Leagues Beneath the Sea) Verne would later embellish Peron’s account in a non-fiction mash-up of famous maritime voyages. “A more worthy subject for the reflection of a philosopher or statesman never existed – no brighter example of the influence of social institutions can be imagined – than that afforded on the distant shores of which we are speaking,” wrote Verne.

But philosophers and statesmen were a little short on the ground at Sydney Cove.

This cheering vision of what has often been seen as an infernal colony, shouldn’t skew towards utopianism. In its broad outlines the convict experience was, as Darwin put it, about remaking, conversion and elevation. But it was, nevertheless, at heart, a form of extreme punishment for mostly petty offences. For many coveys the pursuit of freedom, despite the considerable risks, was preferable to the rigidities of indentured servitude. They escaped – even from the strictly supervised chain gangs – into the bush. Many perished there.

The reason, I think, that French observers were keen to stress the philosophical implications of the Australian revolution – the wonderfully named Hyacinthe de Bougainville also makes this point during his visit of 1825 – is that the French Revolution had been so heavily freighted with unrealised, or betrayed idealism. They were attuned to the sentiments of equality and fraternity. But they had lived through bloodshed, repression and, at the end of it all, the heady swell of Bonapartism and the restoration of a repressive monarchy. What they observed at Sydney Cove was the realisation of humane social ideas without any espousal of those ideals: a revolution without a Robes­pierre; a revolution without a guillotine.


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Re: Happy Racist Invasion Homophobe Day
Reply #42 - Jun 20th, 2024 at 10:30am
 
10 Street Signs And Why They Are Homophobic




The Babylon Bee has put together the following list of aggressively homophobic street signs to provide a helpful guide to combat hate:

One Way: No! There are many, many ways, you bigot.

Do Not Enter: Only a hateful heteronormative road sign would attempt to dictate where things can or cannot enter.

Do Not Block The Intersection: Is this some hidden message trying to prohibit protesters from blocking traffic? Nice try, fascists!

Yield: Yield? To what? To traditional societal views on human sexuality? Never!

Exit Only: Everyone knows that one person's exit is another person's entrance. Our exits, our choice!

Deaf Children Near: This sign has nothing to do with promoting the LGBTQ agenda… tear it down!

Men At Work: So now you think you have the authority to define what a "man" is? You're not even trying to hide your hate.

Right Turn Only: Why only to the Right? This is literal election interference.

No Passing: Attacking the right of men to pass as women is actual genocide.

STOP: WE WILL NEVER STOP UNTIL EVERYONE IS GAY!


Don't worry, the day is coming soon when all roads will be freed from the oppressive hatred spread by the signs listed above, leaving all streets to be as gay as they want to be!
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