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Australian history (Read 91 times)
Frank
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Australian history
Jan 27th, 2026 at 8:01pm
 
A Lucky History
Tony Abbott argues that Australia’s history provides a lot to be proud of.


This is the book that should never have been needed. Until quite recently it was taken for granted that Australia was a country that all its citizens could take pride in, even the Aboriginal people, for whom the 1967 referendum marked full, if belated, acceptance into the Australian community. But a generation of anxiety over Indigenous dispossession, and the academic triumph of what Geoffrey Blainey has called the “black armband view” of Australian history, has left many Australians ambivalent about our past, even though it is far more good than bad.

Abbott rejects the “Invasion Day” narrative that sees dispossession of the indigenous population as a massive failure for which contemporary Australia must atone through the agenda of “Voice, Truth, and Treaty” proposed in the Uluru Statement from the Heart. Tellingly, he ends his history with the rejection of the Voice in the 2023 referendum. He says Australia did right to reject an exclusive “indigenous only” race-based addition to our constitution.

Abbott does not omit key facts about Aboriginal dispossession. He simply makes the argument that is should be a source of pride and wonder that a society established as a penal settlement turned out to be one of the most successful and stable liberal democracies in the world.

https://quillette.com/2026/01/25/an-enlightened-beginning-australia-history-tony
-abbott/
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Estragon: I can’t go on like this.
Vladimir: That’s what you think.
 
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chimera
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Re: Australian history
Reply #1 - Jan 27th, 2026 at 8:31pm
 
The Saxons took Wales in 1284. Legislation was specific to Wales, such as the Sunday Closing (Wales) Act 1881 and the Welsh Intermediate Education Act 1889. In  1965 administration of Welsh affairs, which had previously been divided between a number of government departments, was united in a newly created Welsh Office.

Following the Jacobite rising of 1745, Scottish affairs were managed by the lord advocate until 1827 backed by the 60th Regiment of Foot (Royal Americans) the largest in England, maintaining multiple battalions (up to 8 during the Napoleonic Wars) to manage colonial garrison duties and destroy Scottish highland charges. The Scots culture always was, always will be and Charles likes his gay laddies in kilts. Is toigh le Teŕrlach a ghillean gčidh ann an ciltichean.

The English are closing the gap before the natives break through.
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Re: Australian history
Reply #2 - Yesterday at 8:43am
 
Quote:
They came of bold and roving stock that would not fixed abide;
There were the sons of field and flock since e’er they learned to ride;
We may not hope to see such men in these degenerate years
As those explorers of the bush – the brave old pioneers.

‘Twas they who rode the trackless bush in heat and storm and drought;
‘Twas they that heard the master-word that called them further out;
‘Twas they that followed up the trail the mountain cattle made
And pressed across the mighty range where now their bones are laid.

But now the times are dull and slow, the brave old days are dead
When hardy bushmen started out, and forced their way ahead
By tangled scrub and forests grim towards the unknown west,
And spied the far off promised land from off the ranges’ crest.

Oh! Ye, that sleep in lonely graves by far-off ridge and plain,
We drink to you in silence now as Christmas comes again,
The men who fought the wilderness through rough unsettled years –
The founders of our nation’s life, the brave old pioneers.


...

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עַם יִשְרָאֵל חַי
 
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chimera
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Re: Australian history
Reply #3 - Yesterday at 10:33am
 
'In the 1603 Union of the Crowns,  James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne as James I. The kingdoms remained separate, sovereign states with distinct parliaments and laws until the 1707 Act of Union. Scotland provided the king as the First Nation and is referred to in 'United Kingdom' with Scots flag included'.

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