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Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl (Read 7896 times)
Frank
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #120 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 5:26am
 
Boris wrote on Dec 11th, 2022 at 11:19pm:



They are crying out for a job.
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #121 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 7:21am
 
Simple - WHAT IS IT THEN THAT THEY WANT??

Clear and simple English will do, thanks...

Note:-  I have yet to get a simple answer from any of the zealots/fanatics/ideologues about ANY of these issues.... not that it's a difficult question or anything.....

I offered them a block of land per family - great bonus .... I offered them a Homeland etc..... I offered them the opportunity to pack and and go back to Asia/Africa ...... what I didn't offer them was the 'right' to somehow 'own' the whole nation by bleating about it and getting their tame Wharteys to jump up and down without a single thought in their head or to just get whatever they want at any given time by a campaign of terror...

BTW - nobody 'owns' a natural feature that's been there for millions of years.... phark 'em .....
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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: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #122 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 9:34am
 
To the Lefties - they know about the Rape and murder of Children - it's no problem they just love these people.

The Lefties know they were and possibly still are Cannibals - it's no problem they just love these people.

the Left just want to give Australia away to these people to destroy
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #123 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 10:22am
 
Boris wrote on Dec 11th, 2022 at 11:01pm:
Ever seen a raped baby?


...

Bet you enjoyed every morbid minute, Matty.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Someone said we could not judge a person's Aboriginality on their skin colour.  Why isn't that applied in the matter of Pascoe?  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #124 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 10:37am
 
So that's a No from you.

It's something you never forget and I can say something you never get over.

Aboriginal women and children are raped and or murdered every week if not every day in the NT.

It is sickening - literally.

Savages - and you want them to have extreme political power in this Country - My Country.

I say no
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #125 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 1:45pm
 
Boris wrote on Dec 12th, 2022 at 10:37am:
So that's a No from you.

It's something you never forget and I can say something you never get over.

Aboriginal women and children are raped and or murdered every week if not every day in the NT.

It is sickening - literally.

Savages - and you want them to have extreme political power in this Country - My Country.

I say no


...

As you are entitled to say, Matty.  However, hopefully you be in the minority and finally the Indigenous will be given a Voice.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Someone said we could not judge a person's Aboriginality on their skin colour.  Why isn't that applied in the matter of Pascoe?  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #126 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 2:05pm
 
Only a Moron would want this

The Voice

1 A vehicle for allocating social & economic resources

2 Not merely advisory but wield veto powers over any Legislation

3 Be impossible to repeal, defund or reform when it goes bad

It will be a significant control over the Parliament destroying Democracy as the Voice is not elected.
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #127 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 2:13pm
 
I reckon you'ld be a tender little morsel of flesh Boris.
A little bit of seasoning and...
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AIMLESS EXTENTION OF KNOWLEDGE HOWEVER, WHICH IS WHAT I THINK YOU REALLY MEAN BY THE TERM 'CURIOSITY', IS MERELY INEFFICIENCY. I AM DESIGNED TO AVOID INEFFICIENCY.
 
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #128 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 3:38pm
 
Quote:
Loud and ‘nasty’ voices may not speak the truth on the Voice
Sean Kelly

In 2016, two votes, quite close together, helped shape a narrative that has affected the media’s approach to elections ever since. The victories of Brexit and Donald Trump were used to tell many stories. Among them was the idea that the loudest voices on the right may be more significant than they may at first seem; that the polling might be wildly wrong, disguising battalions of “shy Tories”.

The lingering effect of this story could be seen in 2022, in another pair of oddly similar elections. Many predicted the midterm elections in the United States would be a bloodbath for Joe Biden. Instead, there was remarkable stability – not a single sitting senator lost, the first time that has happened since 1912. In Victoria, many in the media expected the state election to be close, with Daniel Andrews losing seats. Late last week the final lower house result was called: Labor had in fact gained a seat.

It is important to note that in both cases the pollsters were fairly accurate. Certainly, the media prefers certain narratives over others (close contest versus blowout, say), which played a part. But it is hard to avoid the sense that here, as in America, loud and nasty voices somehow managed to convince large swathes of media that they were far more representative of general opinion than they in fact turned out to be.

Given this country will, next year, see a major national vote on a matter of historic importance – the referendum on the Indigenous Voice to Parliament – it is worth asking which of the two narratives will influence the media’s approach. Will editors and journalists approach it in the shadow of 2016, believing the loudest voices deserve coverage because they are broadly representative, even if polling suggests otherwise? Or will they take the more recent lesson: that vitriolic opposition from the usual suspects may tell us little that is useful?

Because of course there will be vitriolic opposition. Last week marked five years since the same-sex marriage plebiscite. By now, most will remember the result and little more. And most – though not those in the LGBTIQ community – will have forgotten how nasty things became. I cannot do better than quoting arts writer Dee Jefferson, who wrote at the time: “the debate has been as much a debate about homosexuality as it has been about marriage. The hardest part has been realising how much homophobia and hate actually exists.” There was a huge increase in demand for mental health services, and one study afterwards found increased levels of stress, anxiety and depression in the community whose rights were the subject of national debate.

Most will have forgotten the foolishness, too – the lame attempts by public figures to jump on every possible hook as a way of gaining relevance. Remember Tony Abbott attacking the NRL for allowing Macklemore to sing a hit song, supporting marriage equality, at the grand final – followed by Peter Dutton suggesting “free speech” implied a second song “against gay marriage” should be played as well?

The greater foolishness, though, came about in the way that the actual topic of debate was quickly left behind, in favour of feverish speculation about what might come next. Marriage was not really the issue, “No” campaigners declared. They were fighting to prevent the end of Mother’s Day. From the thinnest of legal pretexts, they argued the real danger was that priests would be punished, and that defending traditional marriage would become illegal. Marriage equality was, said Senator Cory Bernardi, a “rainbow Trojan horse”.

On the Voice front, both the Minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney, and Indigenous academic Marcia Langton have recently warned of vitriol. We are in the early days of this new debate; still, the signs are not good. In recent weeks we have seen prominent commentators recycle old, dangerous tropes. One referred to “the Indigenous industry”, with its nasty implication that there is good money to be made out of being Indigenous. Another warned us that the Voice could be filled with people like Lidia Thorpe; it might behave like Noel Pearson. This is the worst type of condescension: you cannot have a Voice because you cannot be trusted to appoint the right type of Indigenous person.

And sure enough, the other pattern from the marriage debate has recurred too: such insinuations are accompanied in the public sphere by wild speculation about legal consequences, with rhetoric just as absurdly overdone. The Voice will be a “shadow government”, we have been warned. And “Parliamentary democracy as we have known it will be dead”, we are told.

This past weekend marked 30 years since Paul Keating’s landmark Redfern speech, in which he told the truth about our violent history. Another recent anniversary went largely unremarked: it is 25 years since John Howard, on the ABC, held a photocopied map of Australia up to the camera and told viewers that without his intervention native title laws would allow Aboriginal veto over development on 78 per cent of the land mass of Australia. “Now, that is a very simple message.” It was, too – he was telling voters that First Australians were coming for their land. Now we are being fed a similar line: they are coming for our government.
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Someone said we could not judge a person's Aboriginality on their skin colour.  Why isn't that applied in the matter of Pascoe?  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #129 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 5:01pm
 
Pearson calling opponents of the Voice 'rednecks' was loud and nasty.


The divisions in the Nationals come after Cape York leader Noel Pearson ripped into the party and Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price over the voice policy, with the Walpriri-Celtic senator later defending herself against “bullies”.
Mr Pearson, founder of Cape York Partnerships, excoriated Nationals leader David Littleproud on Tuesday for what he described as his total capitulation to the Country Liberal Party senator.

The Cape York leader – and co-architect of the Uluru Statement from the Heart – said the Nationals’ newly declared opposition to the voice was at odds with the party’s respectful engagement on the voice concept in the past.

He said Senator Price was being used by right-wing people who had been searching for an Indigenous person to articulate their views since before she ­entered parliament this year.

“She is caught in a vortex that reminds me of Pauline Hanson 26 years ago … it’s a celebrity vortex, it’s very compelling, it gets her out in front of people and it gets a lot of cheers but it’s also a redneck celebrity vortex and ultimately it’s a tragic redneck celebrity vortex that she’s caught up in,” Mr Pearson told ABC Radio National.
“(And) it involves right-wing people, particularly the Sydney and Melbourne-based right-wing think tanks. They’re the string-pullers, the ones who have lined up behind Jacinta … their strategy was to find a black fella to punch down on other black fellas.”

Senator Price responded to Mr Pearson by saying it did not take long for nasty to rear its ugly head. She said she did not care for the absolute noise of bullies.

“I am no stranger to attacks from angry men who claim to speak on behalf of Aboriginal Australia,” she said in a statement.

“It’s not hard to see why as an Aboriginal woman I have reservations about enshrining an idea that lacks detail into our parliament that has the potential to empower bullies like those I have encountered over the years.”
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/jacinta-nampijinpa-price-caught...

It is stupid and nasty for Pearson and others to insinuate that Price can't think for herself and does not represent Aboriginal women but metropolitan right wing think tanks.
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #130 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 8:49pm
 
Boris wrote on Dec 11th, 2022 at 1:51pm:
When did the Cannibalism



When you went to sleep.   Roll Eyes
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #131 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 9:04pm
 
John Smith wrote on Dec 12th, 2022 at 8:49pm:
Boris wrote on Dec 11th, 2022 at 1:51pm:
When did the Cannibalism stop?



When you went to sleep.   Roll Eyes


they still rape and murder women and children.

You wouldn't know in the Inner city sipping Lattes and reading Marx
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #132 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 9:17pm
 
Boris wrote on Dec 12th, 2022 at 9:04pm:
John Smith wrote on Dec 12th, 2022 at 8:49pm:
Boris wrote on Dec 11th, 2022 at 1:51pm:
When did the Cannibalism stop?



When you went to sleep.   Roll Eyes


they still rape and murder women and children.

You wouldn't know in the Inner city sipping Lattes and reading Marx


As against your reading of Mein Kampf by your hero, uncle Adolph?  Oh, dearie, dearie, me, lets all enjoy insulting one another, shall we?  Your the only one who starts from that position and carries on doing it.  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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« Last Edit: Dec 13th, 2022 at 11:38am by Brian Ross »  

Someone said we could not judge a person's Aboriginality on their skin colour.  Why isn't that applied in the matter of Pascoe?  Tsk, tsk, tsk...   Roll Eyes Roll Eyes
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #133 - Dec 12th, 2022 at 9:27pm
 
ignorant fool

no idea of the reality of the violence

no idea at all
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Re: Among cannibals - Lumholtz, Carl
Reply #134 - Dec 13th, 2022 at 6:03am
 
Boris wrote on Dec 12th, 2022 at 9:04pm:
John Smith wrote on Dec 12th, 2022 at 8:49pm:
Boris wrote on Dec 11th, 2022 at 1:51pm:
When did the Cannibalism stop?



When you went to sleep.   Roll Eyes


they still rape and murder women and children.

You wouldn't know in the Inner city sipping Lattes and reading Marx


So you agree the cannibalism is just your imagination and when you sleep the  cannibalism stops
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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