Meanwhile to mark the anniversary of Kevin Rudd the Duds apology the Alboslease Federal Govt has given another $87 million over 4 years to survivors of the so called Stolen Generations scam.
Quote:The federal government has announced 87 million dollars in funding to support survivors.
https://www.pm.gov.au/media/apology-stolen-generations-anniversary-breakfast-0#:...The ALP - the govt that keeps giving to identity politics & division.
The Aboriginal & Islander Budget is around $40 billion per year spent specifically on Aboriginal & Islander programs & issues......
yet these guilt ridden sanctimonious virtue signaling lefties just keep throwing more non Aboriginal tax payers money at them.
How about all the non Aboriginal & Islander survivors of being taken from their parents over the past 80 years get some govt benefits?
Quote:Estimating the total number of non-Indigenous children removed from their parents in Australia over the last 100 years is difficult due to changing definitions and fragmented historical records. However, significant figures from specific periods and contemporary statistics provide a partial picture:
*Forced Adoptions (1950s–1975):
An estimated 250,000 Australian-born non-Indigenous children were removed from their parents—often unmarried mothers—and forcibly adopted during the mid-20th century.
*"Forgotten Australians" (20th Century):
Some estimates suggest as many as 500,000 non-Indigenous children were placed into institutional or out-of-home care throughout the 20th century, a group often referred to as the Forgotten Australians.
*Contemporary Child Protection (2020s):
In recent years, tens of thousands of non-Indigenous children remain in the care system:
As of 30 June 2024, there were 34,800 non-Indigenous children on care and protection orders.
As of 30 June 2022, approximately 25,924 non-Indigenous children were in out-of-home care.
In the 2021–22 period alone, 30,506 non-Indigenous children were the subjects of substantiated maltreatment.
While Indigenous children are significantly over-represented in the child protection system relative to their population size, non-Indigenous children currently make up the numerical majority—roughly 57% to 60%—of those in out-of-home care or on protection orders.
Detailed historical data for the entire 100-year span (1926–2026) is not centrally aggregated, but the figures above indicate that hundreds of thousands of non-Indigenous children have been separated from their parents during this time.