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Australian Politics
In the interest of fairness, and with the intention of diverting attention away from US politics, I thought we could discuss the problems I feel that the Australian government has.
I understand that most of you would be unaware of the goings on in Australia, but if you want to join in then feel free to do some research and join in the criticism. 
Why I disagree with the Howard government:
- The treatment of refugees:
While the controversy has died down recently, the treatment of freedom-seeking refugees (mainly from states with oppressive governments) has, largely, been incredibly poor from a human rights perspective. The Tampa Bay crisis - where the Australian government accused refugees of throwing their children overboard at the risk of drowning them - has been shown to be a lie, where Howard and Downer (the Foreign Affairs minister) were shown up to have fabricated the entire ordeal with the defence force so as to convince the Australian public of the "immorality" of the refugees who seek sanctuary on our shores, thus gaining support for their own xenophobic policies.
Similarly, any refugess who are allowed onto Australian soil (many are sent straight back) are imprisoned in the North Australian outback (at a place called Woomera) in abhorrent conditions that we wouldn't expose our worst criminals to. They are penned in together, and many - if the news stories are true - are being forced to pay up to $12,000 to stay there under lock and key. Several human rights activists (admittedly many have rather dubious methods) have attempted to free the refugees from this prison.
In addition to this, the same government spent $AU 600 million on camps and outposts along the north Australian coast to "protect" us from these refuge-seeking people - money, I suspect, that could have been better employed to help us with the following problem.
- The treament of Australian Aborigines:
According to the UN, the Australian Aboriginal race - comparitively and on the whole - live under worse conditions than any other race on the planet. They are poorly educated, have, on average, a below the poverty line income and - considering they account for only 2% of the Australian population - their incarceration rate is astounding. Yet the government does nothing in attempt to alleviate the problem, nor - so far as I'm aware - has it even admitted there's a problem (despite the UN's protestations).
The issue of "reconciliation" was one that was quite big recently as well - put simply, the issue of reconciling the Australian Aborigines with the "whites" of European decent. Here, the government conveniently side-stepped the entire issue - rarely acknowledging it despite the massive public backing of this formal reconciliation - and stead-fastly refused - on behalf of the Australian commonwealth - to apologize for the travesties committed against the Aboriginal race since colonisation in 1788. Apparently, the fact that Governor Phillip actively encouraged the extermination of Aborigines on behalf on the Australian settlers - or the more recent "stolen genaration" where aboriginal children were literally "stolen" from their parents and sent into white homes (as part of some "conformity" plan I guess) - were too trivial to apologize for.
Anyway, I guess that's enough.
Jump right in to comment about any of these issues, or anything else you feel the Australian government should answer for.
(As I said, if you're unfamiliar with any of these issues, they shouldn't be too difficult to read up on on any Australian news site.)
Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Renegade - The treament of Australian Aborigines: |
Well actually, the Aboriginal people have been given land rights in certain parts of the country, though the decision was one reached by the High Court, rather than the government.
It's a pretty difficult issue - and I don't understand all the legal issues involved - but the High Court overturned the "terra nulius" principle (envoked by white settlers when they arrived here, meaning "no-one's land") in a case between Eddie Mabo and the State of Queensland in 1992, meaning that Aboriginals had a claim to State owned land. Most land handed back is Aboriginal sacred ground in the center of Australia (including Uluru/Ayres Rock, which is why you are no longer permitted to climb it) and to be honest I'm not exactly sure what these "land rights" entitle the aboriginal people to.
This website may help:
http://www.dlwc.nsw.gov.au/care/land/alc/aboutalr.htm
Here it says:
| quote: |
| Land granted to Aboriginal Land Councils has been used for public parks, housing, cultural and heritage purposes, tourism and in some cases has been set aside for environmental protection. In this way Aboriginal people are playing an active role in the expansion and development of the towns and communities in which they live. Aboriginal land rights have distinct benefits for the wider community, particularly when linked to land projects that generate employment and income through farming, mining, commerce, construction and other enterprises. |
Re: Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by CortexBomb I know most of you haven't really thought about it before, but how would you guys perceive the notion of chunks of Australia, Canada, the States, and other countries that have screwed over Aboriginals being given *back* to those peoples so they can form their own independent nations within the borders of said countries? Basically, take the reservation concept, and increase it to state/province/so on scale. Obviously, when you get down to nitty gritty details it'd be a mess, but how do you take the idea *in general*? Would it bother you to see part of your country effectively seceded? Or would you support something that radical? |
...about the whole aboriginal/native indian concept... i believe its simply darwinism at work, survival of the fittest. On the same token you cannot expect a couple of hundred aboriginals in said tribe to occupy and "claim" sooo much land. Granted, the governments did kind of "steal" it from them, but thats what happens in nature. how do you think the americans claimed the states from england?
Now, i think what the US government is doing for the native indians is more than enough for making up for it - they have reservations where they don't get taxed on hardly anything, they are allowed to have casinos where they make BANK - most of the indians on the reservation by my last house were all driving mercedes and BMW's... all pretty much living large, had huge houses with pools, etc...
You have to realize there were hundreds of tribes all spread out - you can't give them each a "state". There are more European-Americans than native americans.... Nature took its course, people spread out.
Now back to Australia, i don't know as well what is happening over there as compared to here, but i am assuming its not much worse (if worse at all). Well..... i dont even know what my point was here, so nevermind 
Re: Re: Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Izzy i general, something could be worked out if a genuine nationalist movement represnting the aboriginal people takes hold, though as you said the details would be a mess. two issues however that i see as problem-atic are 1) the majority of native americans lack the concept of property rights. in their society (as i've been told be a friend who has heritage) there is no mine and yours, and specifically, no one owns land, it belongs to the spirits of nature and so forth (excuse me for sounding stereotypical, no offense meant). so the ironic question arises, on how can a group rule or have soverginty over a land when they infact dont belive in those principles. 2) who becomes a citizen/civilian? how do you prove it? what area should it be? should present day native americans be compinsated for treatment of their distant relatives (at least three generations ago)? |
Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Renegade - The treatment of refugees: While the controversy has died down recently, the treatment of freedom-seeking refugees (mainly from states with oppressive governments) has, largely, been incredibly poor from a human rights perspective. The Tampa Bay crisis - where the Australian government accused refugees of throwing their children overboard at the risk of drowning them - has been shown to be a lie, where Howard and Downer (the Foreign Affairs minister) were shown up to have fabricated the entire ordeal with the defence force so as to convince the Australian public of the "immorality" of the refugees who seek sanctuary on our shores, thus gaining support for their own xenophobic policies. Similarly, any refugess who are allowed onto Australian soil (many are sent straight back) are imprisoned in the North Australian outback (at a place called Woomera) in abhorrent conditions that we wouldn't expose our worst criminals to. They are penned in together, and many - if the news stories are true - are being forced to pay up to $12,000 to stay there under lock and key. Several human rights activists (admittedly many have rather dubious methods) have attempted to free the refugees from this prison. In addition to this, the same government spent $AU 600 million on camps and outposts along the north Australian coast to "protect" us from these refuge-seeking people - money, I suspect, that could have been better employed to help us with the following problem. |
Re: Re: Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Izzy 1) the majority of native americans lack the concept of property rights. in their society (as i've been told be a friend who has heritage) there is no mine and yours, and specifically, no one owns land, it belongs to the spirits of nature and so forth (excuse me for sounding stereotypical, no offense meant). so the ironic question arises, on how can a group rule or have soverginty over a land when they infact dont belive in those principles. |
yes that's right, it's the governments fault when immigrants try to enter our country illegally
have you even seen the footage from the navy of the overboard incident? it looks like they are throwing people overboard, so forgive some middle-level government employee for leaking it to the press who then claim it to be the stance of the entire government.
oh yes, poor refugee's in woomera, again, if you have seen footage of the antics that they get up to, i'm fucking glad they're locked up.
instead of listening to some rich, retarded university student who whines on national tv via the current affairs programmes, try reading/listening to some accounts given by the detention officers who actually run the facility.
your views seem very one sided, try listen to both sides and make your mind up.
the country is going great guns anyway, why is there any need to criticise boring old topics, other than to satisfy the need for intellectual and jaded TA's to flame another country other than their own.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by ABTsportsline ahh i see the point now - my point was that most natives that were originally upsetted by the "upsetting of the spirits" and the stealing of the land were easily qualmed with money put in front of their faces. As does usually happen, religion takes a back-seat to money. That and maintaining of heritage - a lot of natives like to keep their dating to other natives to keep the heritage alive. All fine and dandy, but after a couple of generations there will be some inbreeding going on .... |
Re: Re: Re: Re: Australian Politics
| quote: |
| Originally posted by Arbiter The bigger problem, though, is that how do you divide up the land between tribes? Most of them still don't look at themselves as being one ethnic group, but many. You can't just give them a bunch of land and tell them to divide it up amongst themselves - and no matter how you divided it up for them there would be some group that would feel slighted. |
| quote: |
| yes that's right, it's the governments fault when immigrants try to enter our country illegally |
| quote: |
| have you even seen the footage from the navy of the overboard incident? it looks like they are throwing people overboard, so forgive some middle-level government employee for leaking it to the press who then claim it to be the stance of the entire government. |
| quote: |
| oh yes, poor refugee's in woomera, again, if you have seen footage of the antics that they get up to, i'm fucking glad they're locked up. |
| quote: |
| your views seem very one sided, try listen to both sides and make your mind up. |

| quote: |
| the country is going great guns anyway, why is there any need to criticise boring old topics, other than to satisfy the need for intellectual and jaded TA's to flame another country other than their own. |
And it looks like Malcolm Fraser agress with me:
The Big Lies of 'Border Protection'
meh
i doubt there will ever be a solution to the refugee/ illegal immigrant situation 
sifntj0r renagade just owned you hard dipshit, you are a typical ignorant retarded sheep that our governmnet loves cause you beleive everything they want you to, Howard won the election thanks to fucktards like you.
Ive been inside a refugee centre and its not far off prison.
For what its worth a few points of clarification on the Aboriginal people.
its a myth to say that Indigenous Australians have no concept of land ownership or system of laws.
Indigenous laws were not codified because they did not have writing, doesnt mean they didnt exist.
The concept of 'terra nullius' (vacant land) was a legal fiction to justify dispossession. The lie the English used to steal the land from Indigenous people in Australia is the same lie used by the Jews to steal land from the Palestinians. Nothing ever really changes.
The fact that some of the Indigenous people and Palestinians were migratory does not mean the land didnt belong to them.
Unlike Israel however Australia has(better late than never) recognised the prior ownership of the land and apologised for stealing it.
The problem with the Native Title system is trying to prove ownership, trying to prove an uninterupted connection to the land. I believe currently Indigenous Australians make up under 1% of the population and have native title rights to about 13% of the land.
Mining companies and pastoralists that do have leases of land that is or may be subject to native title are required to consult with the native title holders.
The problems faced by Indigenous Australians are many(enough to fill plenty of books) but are mainly driven by poverty due to isolation, most Indigenous people live in isolated communities with little access to meaningful employment. Australian governments state and federal do a lot to help them but it is difficult to erase the crimes of 200 years overnight.
A good point I saw raised once in a book, is that the Aborigines are Australia's silent people.
You just never see them anywhere - granted they are a small percentage of the population, but you just never see an Aborigine delivering mail, serving coffee, fixing a phone line, working in an office... it's almost as if they don't exist 
I wont comment on the Aborigine issue as as far as I'm concerned I'll probably get in trouble for it.
My parents are immigrants, and yes I was born in Australia. I like to think of myself as a realist and not a racist though. Quite frankly I feel the government has every right to protect our shores from immigrants. I ask u this about the countries these people are coming from. Yes, granted some are opressive. YOu have to look at the history of immigrants migrating to AUstralia on the boats. In the 1950's-60's when the Greeks and Italian graced the AUstralia shores we didn't stick to our suburbs etc. WE assimilated. ANd this is what this debate comes down to. Assimilataion, Screw multiculturalism, u come to australia u got to live the Australian way of life, not another life. This is no offence to the Middle eastern people of the world but quite frankly they refuse to accept AUstralian society for the way it is. Take NSW for example and the lebanese population there, and the recent rape attacks that happened. What is happening is australia is accepting these people under the grounds of multiculturalism but its under these ground that is undermining our whole society as a whole. Kids even been born in AUstralia are taking middle eastern attitudes towards people and that is frightenning.
Therefore come to Australia but come through the correct way, save u time and save us time and our tax.
Cheers,
Multicultarism shmamev.
interesting point paul 
with refugees..
i dunno where i stand exactly...
if your race or religion or way of life is being opressed and persecuted and you want out, then sure, leave the country and go live somewhere else. if the only way you can do that is by paying someone to hide on a boat then so be it. BUT, if that boat stops at other countries where you can live but you keep going because you want a certain country, well then if you get denied i think too bad. the country you really want to get to might be better off than the other stops but if they will accept you then why not go there?
and about their treatment? have you been to a camp? i havent so i dont make comment about specific conditions. people say they are treated like criminals. well they are! they are illegally trying to enter a country that doesn't know who they are, why they are coming, what they bring with them. what do you expect the government to do with them? they need to be checked out and processed as citizens if they are allowed to stay. what would you have them do while they wait? live it up in hotels payed for by taxpayers? or keep them in a camp with friends and family who came with them? people say they get treated bad, but how do you know none of them are murderers or rapists or came here to help set up extremist groups or terrorist cells?
that last sentence may sound extreme but these are things the government needs to take into account when they decide if these people should stay or go.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by webmeister A good point I saw raised once in a book, is that the Aborigines are Australia's silent people. You just never see them anywhere - granted they are a small percentage of the population, but you just never see an Aborigine delivering mail, serving coffee, fixing a phone line, working in an office... it's almost as if they don't exist |
i really wish people wouldnt be so quick to make such detrimental generalisations...
there will ALWAYS be a few bad eggs in every basket, middle eastern, asian, caucasian, greek - whoever, but it doenst mean u have to take the bad qualities of a select few and brand the whole group respectively
i have many many middle eastern friends (who have assimilated quite well thank you very much) and quite frankly it disheartens me to read such negative remarks.
As far as the "illegal" immigrants are concerned, a vast majority of these people are indeed true refugees who come to australia to escape persecution and are not the queue jumpers as our government would like us to believe. The fact is that these refugees are not illegal - they are allowed, under international law to seek asylum in another country if they are being persecuted in their own. Granted there is a proportion who come to Australia as economic migrants - those just seeking a better life and not fleeing persecution and i suppose there will be problems in seperating the two, but mandatory detention imo is not the answer - Australia is the only western country in the world that supports this policy, surely that says something. These people would be much better off out in the community, working, contributing to society, possibly in rural areas where such a working population is sorely needed, all while being processed. disagree with the view on boat people being a terrorist threat - as simplistic as this might sound, you'd think that members of highly organised terrorist groups would have the resources and funds to fly where they wanted to go.
yeah of course there are genuine refugess but what else can they do about it? they need to wait and be checked out and have their refugee status and stuff organised. they could probably have better conditions but i think the principle of keeping them together in one place while they wait is right. if you just decide to turn up to another country on a rickety boat with possibly no papers or anything what do you expect? to be welcomed with open arms and hear 'hey, how u doin? was your journey a good one?' it sounds harsh but i dont think thats the right way. they should be hearing 'hi, welcome to australia, please stay here for a while while we check you out and grant you refugee status. then you are free to go.'
why is it then that the process of placing the refugees in the community works so well in other countries?
i agree we cant just straight off send them out, you need to run the necessary identity and criminal checks, but once these are out of the way, the asylum seekers should be allowed out into the community while their refugee status is processed. Like i said before, they can contribute to society this way - much more humane and much more cost effective if you ask me. Locking them up, treating them like criminals is the wrong thing to do, especially when a large proportion of these people are fleeing these very conditions in their country of origin - ive read that 60% of refugees are found to be victims of severe torture and trauma... just try to put yourselves in their shoes
| quote: |
| Originally posted by sifntj0r yes that's right, it's the governments fault when immigrants try to enter our country illegally have you even seen the footage from the navy of the overboard incident? it looks like they are throwing people overboard, so forgive some middle-level government employee for leaking it to the press who then claim it to be the stance of the entire government. oh yes, poor refugee's in woomera, again, if you have seen footage of the antics that they get up to, i'm fucking glad they're locked up. instead of listening to some rich, retarded university student who whines on national tv via the current affairs programmes, try reading/listening to some accounts given by the detention officers who actually run the facility. your views seem very one sided, try listen to both sides and make your mind up. |
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