Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
Oh good. Taking children from people isn't a bad thing, fancy that. I think when you have your first child I might come around and steal him -- how would you like that? According to you, it is perfectly acceptable.
If i'm an alcoholic/abusive parent who neglects my child or something, then DOCS will take my child......
Were the Aborigines at the time alcoholics or abusing their children? No.
(Incidentally, who gave them alcohol again?)
Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
This is the problem with all your arguments: you completely exaggerate and misrepresent everything said by the other side. Look at what I said. I'm sure you can read, so it may just take some concentration for you: "There were people with their own customs, rules, religion and society."
But they didn't? Saying that they had customs etc is ridiculous. They didn't have a system of society or anything. What we took was rightfully taken under the name of King George.
1. Firstly, history disagrees with you. Ask any history student. Read a history book. Read the Mabo decision.
2. You obviously have no idea what the doctrine of terra nullius is anyway. Even if we rejected the idea that Aborigines had no social structure, laws, customs, etc,
Mabo held that it applied only to
literally empty land. So terra nullius does not apply.
Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
Again, in what way did they not own the land?
Ok you give up your house to them and all your posessions tomorrow, then i'll believe that you actually believe what you're saying and that you're not just trying to be some do gooder.
1. Again you make completely irrelevant statements while failing to address my question. Please at least learn that you are making the
tu quoque fallacy. No matter what I
do, my argument may be correct.
2. I never proposed that anyway. You have this ridiculous notion that anyone supporting Aborigines wants to force all white people to leave their homes and give all the land back to them.
Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
They made use of the land - they had roving societies and they returned to places over and over again
So.. They were nomadic and didn't put the land to any use.
From the
Mabo decision, his honour Toohey J states at Para 18:
In particular, the view that a nomadic lifestyle is inconsistent with occupation of land is at odds with reality. It pays no regard to the reason why people move from one area of land to another. Often people move, not because they lack any association with the land over which they travel but to follow the availability of water and food in a harsh climate.
Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
Just because they were nomadic does not mean that they had no ownership.
Yes it does, because in our legal system.. which is all there is in Australia.. ownership exists through written documents.. The aborigines had none. If they did.. they wouldn't have been declared terra nullius.
The master scholar of property law strikes again! Behold Mathmite, the all-knowing God of legal knowledge who likes to lecture a law student deeply familiar with Mabo about the law -- without having read the decision!
1. Again, you have no idea what terra nullius actually involves, see my above comment.
2. You're wrong (surprise). Property is not just about written documents. Ever heard of adverse possession?
Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
Again you look at this from a completely Eurocentric perspective of the world.
Funny that, me being a descendant from Europe and all.. What way do you look at it? From an Aboriginal perspective? They must train you well at university.
Yes, at university we learn to think without bias. Don't know whether that's your type of place though.
Lozacious said:
MoonlightSonata said:
Actually they did. It is now known they did have complex social arrangements.
There are only tiney traces, and what ever it was that they had.. It was not substantial enough.
To me, a rock which represents a stone axe does not represent civilisation.
Again, read a history book.