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Poll Poll
Question: Will you vote for a separate Aboriginal Voice in Parliament?

YES    
  11 (28.9%)
NO    
  27 (71.1%)




Total votes: 38
« Created by: Grappler Deep State Feller on: Jul 30th, 2022 at 7:27pm »

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The question about a voice will be asked... (Read 54928 times)
Captain Nemo
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #660 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 1:46pm
 
Boris wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 1:08pm:
Is there a single person here who disagrees with creating a permanent Voice for people based on race on the constitution?


Yes.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #661 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 1:56pm
 
freediver wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:42am:
Quote:
Enabling decent participation in a rich nation's economy


Are you talking about Australia, or China?


Oz; China doesn't have a disadvantage by race problem;  and I already disposed of your fake 'prosperity' argument, in#618.     
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Grappler Deep State Feller
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #662 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:12pm
 
I get it - we live in a rich country here and all the benefits fall to the white population who have no special Voice but are represented by the Top End Of Town that so munificenctly rewards people for occupying the Bottom End Of town, and somehow there is a descending order going down from Poor Whites, through Sallows rich or poor, to street dogs and stray cats, then Abos?

Am I right so far? So that means that if you are White you are automatically rich, and everyone else is not??

Well - do I look like I'm sitting back at the country club downing a cold one while all them 4A Boos are out there humping the boonies?  There's more of 'em in the clubs than of me!!

Your politics are racist and divisive and frankly ridiculous as well as absurdly naive and unsupported by reality.
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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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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #663 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:31pm
 
Grappler Deep State Feller wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 11:59am:
Evades the point that lobbyists are not paid by government etc, and that the lobbyists do NOT represent the majority of White Australia.
 

Lobbyists are funded by the big end of town, that is the point.

Quote:
So you're now saying that 'the big end of town' with its money and lobbyists and inside running is the voice for all White Australians?


No, I'm saying it's the voice for the big end of town.

The fact is the rest of us must share the scraps, after the polies have legislated the policies which advantage  capital, rather than wages.

Quote:
Now that is the silliest notion ever stated.  The ordinary person has no Voice.... there is no fair play in giving a free, all expenses overpaid Voice to one group.
 

Your confusion is explained above.

Quote:
We'll try again – what about the Poor End Of Town?  Can you begin to see the difference here – between what you are stating and what the simple reality is?


I hope by now you are seeing YOUR confusion: polies are captured (and funded) by private capital; the poor end of town has no voice other than a state ordained pretense of equality before the law. 

Quote:
What is it that you imagine the Poor Whites have to do?  Just stand about and have everything handed to them by the Big End Of Town?


No, they have to compete in a vicious neoliberal job market, in which the wages share of profits has been decreasing while capital's share of profits has been increasing, since the adoption of neoliberal 'small government' orthodoxy in the 80's.

Quote:
The government will not close the gap – the gap is massively self-created, you have been told over and over that Intervention™ and intervention over two centuries has not worked, yet you imagine Big Brother can just romp in and fix it all with some magic wand?  Listen to wiser heads.


The successful CDEP, closed by Howard blinded by free market and low taxation ideology, proves you wrong; you have never addressed that point.   

Quote:
That is precisely the desire of the majority of White Australia at The Poor End of Town.  Understand?? 


I do, but we are back to your usual GIGO tendency, in this case failure to see that the big end of town self funds its own capture of politicians.

Quote:
What makes you imagine that a top-down society actually offers a full share to everyone in a certain demographic, White or Black? 


See ... now you are imaging that I support "trickle neoliberalism, you are completely confused. 

Quote:
What makes you imagine that all that profit going Offshore is not detrimental to the Poor End Of Town that cannot afford to buy shares etc and has to - to use your words - fight for the left-over scraps as well as struggle to even develop a decent standard of living under our current disastrous economic management? 


Hooray we agree ...but due to your total confusion..... 

Quote:
If this is a rich country, the riches are massively unevenly distributed, and it has nothing to do with colour or creed.


Again correct -  except  for the highlighted (as I explained in the other thread: the advantages of a white parent, etc)

Quote:
You have advanced zero reason for any special privileges to the Indigenous.


Just to repeat:

1. The systemic rape of the poor by the rich in a neoliberal economy.

2. Specifically re abos: their added cultural disadvantage as a result of confusion on all sides re 'culture', more fully addressed in the other thread. 
ie Blind Freddy can see this coming'.   
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« Last Edit: Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:47pm by thegreatdivide »  
 
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Boris
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #664 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:42pm
 
Their culture is violence rape and murder

it is their tradition
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Grappler Deep State Feller
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #665 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:45pm
 
Lobbyists do NOT represent the majority of White Australia.

The fact is the rest of us must share the scraps.

The poor end of town has no voice other than a state ordained pretense of equality before the law.

They have to compete in a vicious neoliberal job market.

Correct so far - so what is your argument against The Majority having ITS special voice?  clearly that majority is little if any better off than the Abos.

"The successful CDEP, closed by Howard blinded by free market and low taxation ideology, proves you wrong; you have never addressed that point."

Nor do I intend to - it was years ago, it did not work, nothing else has worked, and I have never argued for or against it, since it is irrelevant to the issue under discussion.

when have I ever said that the big end of town works for the peons?  Your thinking is frankly mystifying... yet you wish to continue to exclude the Majority from any real Voice while attacking those who say NO to any special Voice?

I'm missing nothing here - you are relentlessly confused and immune to reason.

There will be NO special voice for a minority.  One Law for All - All Laws For One!!  Or it's Every Man for Himself.



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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: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #666 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:02pm
 
Geoff Clark was elected ATSIC chairman in December 1999, the organisation set up its own think tank to define what a treaty would look like. Clark was a founding member of the Aboriginal Provisional Government and had been its deputy chairman since 1990. He commissioned another founding member of this group, University of Technology Sydney legal academic Larissa Behrendt, to formu­late the terms and process of a formal treaty between the Aus­tralian government and Aboriginal people. One of the think tank’s first publications Treaty: Let’s Get it Right! asked the rhetorical question:

Q: Is a treaty about setting up a “black state”?

A: Treaties in other countries have provided for indigenous self-government. It is likely that Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples would want to negotiate self-government in relation to traditional lands as part of a treaty in Australia.

In short, their answer to a black state was yes. Their case (completely erroneous in my view) was that the foundation of the British colony in 1788 did not extin­guish the sovereignty of the indigenous peoples. Like the native title the High Court’s Mabo judgment found had continued after colonisation, proponents of a treaty claim pre-1788 Abo­riginal government and laws were never legitimately extin­guished either, and should be restored.

And if laws could be revived then so should be Aboriginal governance. They wanted the treaty to complete what they called the “unfinished business” of colonisation.

In short, the logic of the position that indigenous people should be recognised not as just another minority group but as First Nations, leads inexorably to a demand for their own separate nations with their own independent national leaders. Their ultimate ambitions, as Michael Mansell said, would be to take their rightful place among the nations of the world.

In the 1990s, when the working group for the United Nations’ proposed Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was hearing submissions, a major debate emerged over the inclusion of the right of indige­nous peoples to self-determination. The observer from Canada argued that a ref­erence to a right of self-determination would imply a right of secession, and so should be struck out. How­ever, he was over­ruled by the working group, which responded to protests by representatives of various indigenous peoples demanding “the right to self-determination without any limita­tions or qualifica­tions”. Despite continued opposition from Canada, New Zealand, the United States and Australia up to 2007, when the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peo­ples was passed by the UN General Assembly, the right to self-determination remained intact.

In April 2009, Kevin Rudd’s Labor government took Australia down the road proposed by the UN. Rudd formally endorsed the declaration of indigenous rights. Given the enormous sense of grievance expressed by the current Aboriginal establishment and, given the fact that its members are prominent advocates within the international First Nations movement, it would be naïve to imagine that the leaders of Aboriginal states would be satisfied to confine themselves to the provision of municipal services, health reform or welfare payments when they could see a far more ambitious goal within reach.

In Australia, a constitutional amendment would provide a bargaining position for indigenous peoples to exert far more influence over our national government than anyone now imagines. It would also provide a political platform from which to play to a world audience and to make allies who would not necessarily share mainstream Australian concerns.

In its own interests, mainstream Australia has no reason to provide even the slightest leverage for such possibilities, or to leave future generations with their consequences. Aboriginal sovereignty poses long-term risks for Australian sovereignty which are not worth running.

Most Australians today see the creation of the Voice as a constitutional change that would recognise the original inhabitants of this continent as valued citizens of a tolerant and generous Aus­tralia. However, the Aboriginal establishment sees it all quite differently. They don’t want to be just a respected minority group. They see themselves as Australian Aboriginals who retain the rights of the original peo­ple whose lands were invaded and are now illegally occupied. Voters in the proposed referendum need to recognise that its ultimate objective is the establishment of a politically separate race of people, and the potential break-up of Australia.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #667 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:11pm
 
Grappler Deep State Feller wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:45pm:
Lobbyists do NOT represent the majority of White Australia.[

The fact is the rest of us must share the scraps.

The poor end of town has no voice other than a state ordained pretense of equality before the law.

They have to compete in a vicious neoliberal job market.

Correct so far - so what is your argument against The Majority having ITS special voice?  clearly that majority is little if any better off than the Abos.

"The successful CDEP, closed by Howard blinded by free market and low taxation ideology, proves you wrong; you have never addressed that point."

Nor do I intend to - it was years ago, it did not work, nothing else has worked, and I have never argued for or against it, since it is irrelevant to the issue under discussion.

when have I ever said that the big end of town works for the peons?  Your thinking is frankly mystifying... yet you wish to continue to exclude the Majority from any real Voice while attacking those who say NO to any special Voice?

I'm missing nothing here - you are relentlessly confused and immune to reason.

There will be NO special voice for a minority.  One Law for All - All Laws For One!!  Or it's Every Man for Himself.


Care to edit that post properly, so I can reply?  Or are you a fraud like freediver who just dismisses a debate ...'FTW', when it suits him. 
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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #668 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:17pm
 
Boris wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 2:42pm:
Their culture is violence rape and murder

it is their tradition


Not really, if you read the reports of the early explorers, it seems  they lived in settled  groups  according to certain laws; but indeed: "Civilization is a race between education and catastrophe ; HG Wells.

So we have a task in front of us...
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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #669 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:44pm
 
Boris wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:02pm:
Geoff Clark was elected ATSIC chairman in December 1999, the organisation set up its own think tank to define what a treaty would look like. Clark was a founding member of the Aboriginal Provisional Government and had been its deputy chairman since 1990. He commissioned another founding member of this group, University of Technology Sydney legal academic Larissa Behrendt, to formu­late the terms and process of a formal treaty between the Aus­tralian government and Aboriginal people. One of the think tank’s first publications Treaty: Let’s Get it Right! asked the rhetorical question:

Q: Is a treaty about setting up a “black state”?

A: Treaties in other countries have provided for indigenous self-government. It is likely that Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islander peoples would want to negotiate self-government in relation to traditional lands as part of a treaty in Australia.

In short, their answer to a black state was yes. Their case (completely erroneous in my view) was that the foundation of the British colony in 1788 did not extin­guish the sovereignty of the indigenous peoples. Like the native title the High Court’s Mabo judgment found had continued after colonisation, proponents of a treaty claim pre-1788 Abo­riginal government and laws were never legitimately extin­guished either, and should be restored.

And if laws could be revived then so should be Aboriginal governance. They wanted the treaty to complete what they called the “unfinished business” of colonisation.

In short, the logic of the position that indigenous people should be recognised not as just another minority group but as First Nations, leads inexorably to a demand for their own separate nations with their own independent national leaders. Their ultimate ambitions, as Michael Mansell said, would be to take their rightful place among the nations of the world.

In the 1990s, when the working group for the United Nations’ proposed Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was hearing submissions, a major debate emerged over the inclusion of the right of indige­nous peoples to self-determination. The observer from Canada argued that a ref­erence to a right of self-determination would imply a right of secession, and so should be struck out. How­ever, he was over­ruled by the working group, which responded to protests by representatives of various indigenous peoples demanding “the right to self-determination without any limita­tions or qualifica­tions”. Despite continued opposition from Canada, New Zealand, the United States and Australia up to 2007, when the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peo­ples was passed by the UN General Assembly, the right to self-determination remained intact.

In April 2009, Kevin Rudd’s Labor government took Australia down the road proposed by the UN. Rudd formally endorsed the declaration of indigenous rights. Given the enormous sense of grievance expressed by the current Aboriginal establishment and, given the fact that its members are prominent advocates within the international First Nations movement, it would be naïve to imagine that the leaders of Aboriginal states would be satisfied to confine themselves to the provision of municipal services, health reform or welfare payments when they could see a far more ambitious goal within reach.

In Australia, a constitutional amendment would provide a bargaining position for indigenous peoples to exert far more influence over our national government than anyone now imagines. It would also provide a political platform from which to play to a world audience and to make allies who would not necessarily share mainstream Australian concerns.

In its own interests, mainstream Australia has no reason to provide even the slightest leverage for such possibilities, or to leave future generations with their consequences. Aboriginal sovereignty poses long-term risks for Australian sovereignty which are not worth running.

Most Australians today see the creation of the Voice as a constitutional change that would recognise the original inhabitants of this continent as valued citizens of a tolerant and generous Aus­tralia. However, the Aboriginal establishment sees it all quite differently. They don’t want to be just a respected minority group. They see themselves as Australian Aboriginals who retain the rights of the original peo­ple whose lands were invaded and are now illegally occupied. Voters in the proposed referendum need to recognise that its ultimate objective is the establishment of a politically separate race of people, and the potential break-up of Australia.


Yes Geoff Clark and like-minded people are more concerned with symbolism than reality  - ie, treaties, rather than successful participation the nation's economic life.

But all the voices and treaties in the world  don't change realities on the ground, as a Canadian visitor to the recent Garma festival in the NT pointed out.

Only schemes like the CDEP can do that; started by Fraser in 1977, ie, real community development via waged aboriginal  employment in the local community, according to local circumstances.

The CDEP was destroyed by neoliberal market ideology, as well as misplaced attachment to culture by well-meaning people like Clark who don't understand employment is the beginning of prosperity.   
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Lisa Jones
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #670 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:47pm
 
Over 65% voted NO!!!!

🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳
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If I let myself be bought then I am no longer free.

HYPATIA - Greek philosopher, mathematician and astronomer (370 - 415)
 
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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #671 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:09pm
 
Lisa Jones wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:47pm:
Over 65% voted NO!!!!

🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳


On Ozpolitics?

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Lisa Jones
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #672 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:10pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:09pm:
Lisa Jones wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:47pm:
Over 65% voted NO!!!!

🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳


On Ozpolitics?



Yep 👍
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If I let myself be bought then I am no longer free.

HYPATIA - Greek philosopher, mathematician and astronomer (370 - 415)
 
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thegreatdivide
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #673 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:22pm
 
Lisa Jones wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:10pm:
thegreatdivide wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:09pm:
Lisa Jones wrote on Aug 17th, 2022 at 3:47pm:
Over 65% voted NO!!!!

🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳


On Ozpolitics?



Yep 👍


I was going to make a rude comment but I wont...

but the real issue is not even a voice, or a treaty;  the real issue is successful participation in the nation's economic life.

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mothra
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Re: The question about a voice will be asked...
Reply #674 - Aug 17th, 2022 at 4:33pm
 
Guardian Essential poll: most Australians support an Indigenous voice – but they don’t know too much about it


Two-thirds of respondents back constitutional recognition, including 77% of Labor voters and 53% of Coalition voters


A clear majority of Australians are on board with an Indigenous voice to parliament, according to the latest Guardian Essential poll, but a majority of respondents also haven’t heard very much about it.

Asked whether or not they would support a constitutionally enshrined voice to parliament to provide advice on policies impacting First Nations people, 65% of 1,075 Guardian Essential poll respondents said yes, and 35% said no.

The majority favour the proposed overhaul, including 77% of Labor voters, 53% of Coalition voters, 81% of Greens voters and 56% of people who vote for someone other than the major parties).


https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/aug/09/guardian-essential-poll-m...
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If you can't be a good example, you have to be a horrible warning.
 
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