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Poll closed Poll
Question: Will the referendum be voted in?
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No    
  42 (75.0%)
Yes    
  14 (25.0%)




Total votes: 56
« Last Modified by: Redmond Neck on: Feb 25th, 2023 at 11:17am »

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The Aboriginal Voice referendum (Read 91858 times)
thegreatdivide
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #690 - Feb 10th, 2023 at 12:45pm
 
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Frank
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #691 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 6:53am
 
Tennis Albo's sole argument for constitutional change is emotional blackmail.
Despicable.


...
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issuevoter
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #692 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 7:06am
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Feb 10th, 2023 at 12:45pm:
Frank wrote on Feb 9th, 2023 at 7:51am:
Voice or sovereignty: Lidia Thorpe has revealed the real Blak agenda


Anthony Albanese keeps saying the voice is no more than a “modest but meaningful” change about being polite to the First Australians. What he doesn’t say is that the voice is just one element in the demands of the Uluru Statement from the Heart, to which he and his government are fully committed.

As recently as last weekend, at the Chifley Research Centre, he said: “I am proud to lead a government committed to the Uluru Statement from the Heart in full.”


Except.. what Albo is committed to, and what Parliament will legislate,  are 2 different things.

Quote:
The Uluru Statement expressly states “our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander tribes were the first sovereign nations of the Australian continent” and that “this sovereignty … has never been ceded or extinguished”.


Ah yes, the hoary issue of 'sovereignty' - as the individual  perceives it!

Thorpe is a cultural  extremist, as are those who identify  capitalist (or socialist) ideology as the correct source of sovereignty.

Neither 'black sovereignty', nor 'national sovereignty', are compatible with healthy functional relations between the peoples of the world.

Just sayin',, while we watch Ukraine being pulverized in a [highlight]proxy war between NATO and Russia.


The fact that Europe, the US, and other countries like ours are supporting Ukraine, does not make the conflict a proxy war, although the fascist dictatorship in Moscow would like you to think so. If it was the case, the war would have been taken into Russian territory on day 2. It is easy to attach a bogus equivalency to the parties, as if it is just a territorial dispute. The war is about Ukraine independence from Putin's Moscow cabal, not NATO against Russia. You know this already, but you like to be contrary.
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« Last Edit: Feb 11th, 2023 at 8:44am by issuevoter »  

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MeisterEckhart
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #693 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 7:22am
 
Frank wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 6:53am:
Tennis Albo's sole argument for constitutional change is emotional blackmail.
Despicable.


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fok37t9XgAATIGB?.jpg

Australia's international reputation regarding ethnicity has historically been abysmal.

Unfortunately, historically Australia has mistaken white trash for 'salt of the earth'.

Was watching one of those 'American reacts to Australia' youtube channels and the guy was reacting to early 90s reruns of 'Hey, Hey, It's Saturday'. Although he didn't realise it at first, he was often broadcasting blatantly racist comments by John Blackman (as himself or Dicky Nee) and Red Symons.

One that stuck in my mind was:
    Daryl Somers: So, Kamal, you've been out of the country for a while.

    Kamal: Yes, I've been to Sri Lanka and the United States and then back into Sydney, Australia.

    Dicky Nee: Mr Kamal, how did they know you were Australian... 'cos you don't look like one.
Kamal said nothing, just looked shocked and offended.

Daryl Somers moved the show on.
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Frank
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #694 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 7:52am
 
When it comes to black sovereignty, the only differences between Thorpe, on the one hand, and key members of the voice movement embedded in and advising the Albanese government, are tone, timing and subterfuge. Thorpe is brash. She doesn’t do subterfuge. And she is impatient.

But it would be a grave mistake to treat Thorpe as a fringe-dwelling maverick, or to treat the black sovereignty movement as merely a far-left analogue of the far-right “sovereign citizen” brigade. It is now becoming clear that core claims to sovereignty made by Thorpe’s Black Sovereignty Movement are shared by key figures who have been central to the drafting of the words of the Albanese Amendment and to whom the government has outsourced its legal advice on the voice.

So much so that the words of the Albanese Amendment and the practical operation of the voice are little more than the appealing bait hiding the hook of Indigenous sovereignty. Ordinary Australians certainly have not been told this was likely and don’t realise it’s happening. It is also possible that while Albanese is very good at slogans about the voice, he has little understanding of the substance of how the voice – and his proposed words – are integral to securing black sovereignty.

We should have known, of course. The Uluru Statement from the Heart says Indigenous “sovereignty has never been ceded or extinguished and co-exists with the sovereignty of the crown”. That same Statement from the Heart proposes “an important reordering of the hierarchy of the state” and a “transformation in Australia’s established constitutional ­institutions”.

Unwisely, we paid no attention to this radical language in the Uluru Statement that reflects a long campaign for black sovereignty. Securing sovereignty depends, first and foremost, on entrenching the necessary constitutional machinery – a voice.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/the-voice-lidia-thorpe-wants-separatism-rather-than-reconciliation/news-story/88325494922f0b98f5971f0c0d125362

How do you say 'sovereignty' in Aboriginal languages?

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issuevoter
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #695 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 8:43am
 
MeisterEckhart wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 7:22am:
Frank wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 6:53am:
Tennis Albo's sole argument for constitutional change is emotional blackmail.
Despicable.


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fok37t9XgAATIGB?.jpg

Australia's international reputation regarding ethnicity has historically been abysmal.

Unfortunately, historically Australia has mistaken white trash for 'salt of the earth'.

Was watching one of those 'American reacts to Australia' youtube channels and the guy was reacting to early 90s reruns of 'Hey, Hey, It's Saturday'. Although he didn't realise it at first, he was often broadcasting blatantly racist comments by John Blackman (as himself or Dicky Nee) and Red Symons.

One that stuck in my mind was:
    Daryl Somers: So, Kamal, you've been out of the country for a while.

    Kamal: Yes, I've been to Sri Lanka and the United States and then back into Sydney, Australia.

    Dicky Nee: Mr Kamal, how did they know you were Australian... 'cos you don't look like one.
Kamal said nothing, just looked shocked and offended.

Daryl Somers moved the show on.


Personally, I don't believe Dickie was serious, after all, it was a comedy. But that might have gone over your head. The other thing I have noticed from those who are quick to accuse people of racism, is that its OK to make fun of white people, but not any of the others.

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MeisterEckhart
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #696 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 9:03am
 
issuevoter wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 8:43am:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 7:22am:
Frank wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 6:53am:
Tennis Albo's sole argument for constitutional change is emotional blackmail.
Despicable.


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fok37t9XgAATIGB?.jpg

Australia's international reputation regarding ethnicity has historically been abysmal.

Unfortunately, historically Australia has mistaken white trash for 'salt of the earth'.

Was watching one of those 'American reacts to Australia' youtube channels and the guy was reacting to early 90s reruns of 'Hey, Hey, It's Saturday'. Although he didn't realise it at first, he was often broadcasting blatantly racist comments by John Blackman (as himself or Dicky Nee) and Red Symons.

One that stuck in my mind was:
    Daryl Somers: So, Kamal, you've been out of the country for a while.

    Kamal: Yes, I've been to Sri Lanka and the United States and then back into Sydney, Australia.

    Dicky Nee: Mr Kamal, how did they know you were Australian... 'cos you don't look like one.
Kamal said nothing, just looked shocked and offended.

Daryl Somers moved the show on.


Personally, I don't believe Dickie was serious, after all, it was a comedy. But that might have gone over your head. The other thing I have noticed from those who are quick to accuse people of racism, is that its OK to make fun of white people, but not any of the others.


'It's only a joke', eh! That's how Rodney Rude used to get away with calling Kamal a little black Sambo.

Please. Don't be a wanker.

Australia ranks alongside southern Americans and South Africans in the world rankings of racism.
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Gnads
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #697 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 9:19am
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Feb 10th, 2023 at 12:33pm:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/feb/03/the-no-side-in-the-voice-r...

The no side in the voice referendum has misread the mood among migrants

Prof. Shireen Morris.


Grin Really - speaking from her Indian perspective ey?
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Gnads
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #698 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 9:21am
 
Frank wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 6:53am:
Tennis Albo's sole argument for constitutional change is emotional blackmail.
Despicable.


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fok37t9XgAATIGB?.jpg



Yep that's it in a nutshell - emotional blackmail.

Too many soppy guilt ridden softcocks will fall for it though.
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Gnads
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #699 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 9:25am
 
issuevoter wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 8:43am:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 7:22am:
Frank wrote on Feb 11th, 2023 at 6:53am:
Tennis Albo's sole argument for constitutional change is emotional blackmail.
Despicable.


https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fok37t9XgAATIGB?.jpg

Australia's international reputation regarding ethnicity has historically been abysmal.

Unfortunately, historically Australia has mistaken white trash for 'salt of the earth'.

Was watching one of those 'American reacts to Australia' youtube channels and the guy was reacting to early 90s reruns of 'Hey, Hey, It's Saturday'. Although he didn't realise it at first, he was often broadcasting blatantly racist comments by John Blackman (as himself or Dicky Nee) and Red Symons.

One that stuck in my mind was:
    Daryl Somers: So, Kamal, you've been out of the country for a while.

    Kamal: Yes, I've been to Sri Lanka and the United States and then back into Sydney, Australia.

    Dicky Nee: Mr Kamal, how did they know you were Australian... 'cos you don't look like one.
Kamal said nothing, just looked shocked and offended.

Daryl Somers moved the show on.


Personally, I don't believe Dickie was serious, after all, it was a comedy. But that might have gone over your head. The other thing I have noticed from those who are quick to accuse people of racism, is that its OK to make fun of white people, but not any of the others.



100% correct
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Frank
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #700 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 3:06pm
 
The voice proposal provides for constitutionally mandated representative body, and privileged access for Indigenous people to make representations to the parliament and government on matters affecting Indigenous people. The access will therefore extend not only to laws and policies specifically about Indigenous people, but to matters that affect all Australians: welfare, taxation, climate change, the environment, to name a few. The four new sentences will be located in an entirely new chapter of the Constitution. Since Federation, no Australian referendum has ever proposed a new chapter in the Constitution.

As currently proposed, the voice will amount to a new group right in the Constitution. It will be exercised collectively and exclusively by Indigenous people.

Interestingly, by his repeated reference to good manners requiring that as a society we owe it to Indigenous people to accede to the Indigenous request for a voice, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese places the voice squarely within influential 20th-century philosopher Joseph Raz’s foundational conception of a group right; a group’s interests will generate rights when it can be said there is a duty owed to them by others. In this case, the duty is to listen. It is owed to Indigenous people by non-Indigenous Australians. The corresponding collective group right is the Indigenous right to make representations or provide advice.

...

By boldly entrenching a new group right, we are set to find ourselves with a novel and unprecedented advisory fourth arm of government. Of course, some people will be comfortable with that, and that is fine. But many Australians would be surprised to hear this characterisation.

Respectfully, the best that can be said for the expert group’s claim that the voice does not afford any kind of rights is that it is a mere assertion. The effort would be laughed out of court if it were ever put as a complete response to the issue at hand. It appears to deliberately approach the question viewed through a straw. The justifications provided are mostly beside the point and therefore wholly unsatisfactory. It is quite possible that the matters raised in this column have simply not been considered by the expert group. To demonstrate integrity, the claim should be revisited and conclusions explained.

As we go down this path we need a transparent, honest and robust public debate about the magnitude of what is being proposed, and the various options available. Yet the debate already has an ominous Kafkaesque feel, even before it has started. It should send a chill up the spine of every Australian.

Louise Clegg is a Sydney barrister.

A commenter:
It is totally illogical for anyone to claim that the proposed Constitutional amendment does not confer any additional rights. No other group in Australia has a constitutionally guaranteed right to make representations to Government. Everyone, regardless of race or ancestry, has a vote and is entitled to form lobby groups to influence Government. That a group, based solely on race, would exclusively be given a lobbying right via the constitution, is racist and anti-democratic.


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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #701 - Feb 11th, 2023 at 3:08pm
 
It was interesting listening to the history of Radio Australia.

It was started in 1939 because Menzies wanted to counter the propaganda from the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany when they attacked Australia over their treatment of indigenous people.
1939 was before Germany had attacked the Soviet Union and they were sharing the spoils of the conquest of Poland.
So even tho the propaganda from overseas has stopped , our very own home grown Nazis and Communists continue it.
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Frank
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #702 - Feb 13th, 2023 at 9:31am
 
Voice Mark 8.0

Nick Cater

The Whitlam government’s National Aboriginal Consul­tative Committee (1973-77) was replaced by the National Aboriginal Conference (1977-85), which in turn was scrapped to make way for the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (1989-2005). The Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation (1991-2000), the National Indigenous Council (2005-07), the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples (2009-19) and the Prime Minister’s Indigenous Advisory Council (2013-19) were established with the same objective of allowing Indigenous voices to be heard in the corridors of power.

“Billions of taxpayer dollars have been spent, but the results speak for themselves – statistics on education, housing, domestic violence and health that are a national disgrace,” Ananda-Rajah told parliament in an adjournment speech in November last year. “To paraphrase Einstein, we can keep doing the same thing over and over again, but don’t expect a different result.”

Ananda-Rajah, a Labor MP, is confident that voice to parliament 8.0 will succeed where versions one to seven failed. Those not bound by the solidarity of the Labor caucus are entitled to be more sceptical.

There is little evidence that the Albanese government has bothered to absorb the lessons of previous well-intentioned but failed attempts to bring Indigenous representatives to the table. Had it done so, it would have avoided trying to rush the voice through in its first year of government, the mistake Gough Whitlam made in 1973.

Elections for the National Aboriginal Consultative Committee were held on November 24, 1973, just 354 days into office. Confusion abounded. Writing in The Age in September 1973, Michelle Grattan described it as a “Black Parliament”, despite the government’s insistence that it would be merely advisory.

Senator Neville Bonner, the only elected Indigenous voice in parliament at that time, described it as a form of apartheid: “To have a separate parliament and a separate electoral roll on which only Aboriginal people will be listed will divide the Aboriginal people not only among themselves but also from the rest of the Australian community. I give a warning here and now that this will cause a lot more trouble than people seem to realise.”

Electoral officials had just 18 days to assemble a voting register. Only 27,000 of the 116,000 Aboriginal Australians recorded in the 1971 census voted.

The 41 elected members were paid a salary of $6000, roughly equivalent to the average wage, plus expenses. At their first meeting on December 18, the one and only demand was that their salaries be doubled, secretaries allocated to each member and that they be issued with cars.

Those demands not being met, the committee emerged from its second meeting in February 1974 with a threat to walk out.


It was followed by a demand for complete control over the $114m allocated to Aboriginal affairs.

The Canberra Times expressed puzzlement at the emphasis being put on “personal emoluments … rather than what is the object of the whole exercise, the Aboriginal people as a whole”. While the experiment was “a worthy one”, the committee “will manifestly have to evolve considerably before it becomes a useful tool in giving the Aborigines a sense of participation in the making of decisions affecting them”.

Thus, the first attempt to give Indigenous Australians a voice to parliament fell foul of the iron law of government funding: the first and often only beneficiaries of programs are those paid to administer them.
...
Last week the Prime Minister declared the argument between constitu­tional recognition and practical outcomes to be “a false choice. We need constitutional recognition to improve practical outcomes. It sends a message* to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people: we’re serious about making this work, over the long-term.”

Albanese’s proposal is but the latest iteration of the failed technocratic approach to Aboriginal affairs now 50 years old. It holds that the physical and emotional needs of Indigenous Australians will be met only once social justice, property rights and compensation have been secured.

Anthropologist Peter Sutton is one of the few former advocates of this approach to renounce it. In his seminal 2010 book The Politics of Suffering, Sutton documents the breakdown in social order, the decline of literacy and health in towns such as Aurukun since the 1970s.

Our mistake, he argues, was to imagine that the solutions to human problems lie in politics and law rather than in the practical application of basic human rights. “This unscientific mumbo jumbo beggars belief,” Sutton writes. “It relies on a kind of magical cause-and-effect relationship, as if a treaty between ‘races’ will keep children safe in their beds at night.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/voice-80-poses-more-risks-than-foreb...
* As Hemmingway said, "If I want to send a message I go to the post office".

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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #703 - Feb 13th, 2023 at 10:46am
 
Frank wrote on Feb 13th, 2023 at 9:31am:
Our mistake, he argues, was to imagine that the solutions to human problems lie in politics and law rather than in the practical application of basic human rights.


Of course; and a basic human right is described in UNUDHR article 23:

"Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment. 2. Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work".

Sutton of course is a hypocrite, he doesn't believe in the above.

And work for blacks has to take into account the h-g tradition, now eclipsed.


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Gnads
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Re: The Aboriginal Voice referendum
Reply #704 - Feb 13th, 2023 at 5:18pm
 
Brian Ross wrote on Oct 5th, 2022 at 10:12pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Oct 5th, 2022 at 12:54pm:
The NZ experience should be studied. Despite the Treaty of Waitangi being generous to the indigenous Maori (who also were not singular in tribal sensibility), and its articles upheld in law, ethnic grievances still exist.

Ethnic grievances, once triggered, can persist for generations, irrespective of reparations.

The notion of a voice will give politicians the get-out-of-jail-free card via 'Well, at least we tried'.


Hopefully there won't be the level of deceit that was evident in the Treaty of Waitangi.  The British lied to the Maori about what it contained and supplied them with a different copy of the document with separate clauses.  This is where most of the problems with the Treaty originated with and it wasn't corrected until the late 20th century because of a court case which overturned the British version and replaced it with the Maori version.

The Australian "Voice" must go to the Australian people to decide if it is to be included in the Constitution.  All the bullshit that is preceding that is just that, bullshit.  Scare tactics promulgated by Racists who fear any power being accorded to the Indigenous.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes



The Voice is a snow job promulgated by activists & leftoid softcocks.

Aboriginals have as much power as any other Australian individual .... the have access to the same representation & have a multitude of lobby groups.

Yet phukkwits like you what to introduce a "race based" amendment into our Constitution(scant on detail) to circumvent the democratic process of govt on any matter they may deem fit.

As has been said to you ad infinitum ....

will every race or ethnic group then be entitled to recognition in the constitution so they have a separate voice to Parliament?

You Dypstick.
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