Laugh till you cry wrote on Nov 24
th, 2013 at 6:09pm:
GA wrote on Nov 24
th, 2013 at 5:55pm:
Laugh till you cry wrote on Nov 24
th, 2013 at 1:44pm:
If you cut off the head the body dies.
Perhaps the royal family can be put on trial for failing to protect its subjects from genocide?
Intentional elimination of a race isn't what happened in Tasmania. And if anything it could be argued that it was a chance event. For example, suppose the indigenous Tasmanians were the exact same race as those on the mainland, the same thing would have happened, but we wouldn't be calling it genocide, and then if it weren't for Tasmania being an island it wouldn't be bothering us at all, anyhow. The facts are that it was never the intention of the British to eliminate native people. But because it did happen without there ever being any intent, it should be taken as a warning that it could even happen again in some other way, at some time in the future. And this time it might be 'gendercide' that happens, but there won't be anyone to protest or even discuss it happening. So it's best not to forget that Australia too is an island.
So hundreds of thousands of Australian aboriginal deaths from bullet in the head or club on the head were chance events?
It was the genocide aspect that was relevant. And estimates were that a maximum of fifteen thousand natives were living in Tasmania at the time of colonization by the British. Most of these people died because of their susceptibility (due to their isolation) to introduced diseases.
Wiki:
"According to James Bonwick, the start of the Black War is 1804.[12] The first conflict between colonists and Aboriginals was on 3 May 1804. There were three surviving eyewitness accounts of what happened on that day. It is known that a large group of Aboriginals, possibly numbering
300 or more, came into the vicinity of the British settlement. The official report by Lt Moore, the commanding officer at the time, referred to an ‘attack’ by Aboriginals armed with spears and indicated that
two Aboriginals were killed and an unknown number wounded."
And it wasn't the British that were shooting and poisoning the native people of this country, it was Aussie. But it was the British justice system that did manage bring at least some of these murderers to justice. So stop blaming the British for our crimes.