Captain Gh3y
Rhinorhondothackasaurus
An Australia not invaded by the British would have been invaded by the French a little later instead, or failing that, they would now all be either Muslims, speaking Japanese or completely gone.
Why should we? It's history, Why should we be responsible for "mending" the atrocities? The artocities were not inflicted upon present day Aboriginals. Present day Aboriginals protest and whinge about our government and their supposed lack of opportunities and services. They protest outside of the Commonwealth Games with banners saying 'Stolenwealth Games', and then demand to be allowed to represent themselves?nyhow, we can't really change history. but i guess, we can attempt to amend the atrocities done in history.
Throwing away history and choosing to just ignore it isn't a test which the whole of Australia chooses to apply to all past wrongs. Even though young Liberal supporters were not directly impacted by the wrongs of Gough Whitlam they still like to winge about him.katie_tully said:Why should we? It's history, Why should we be responsible for "mending" the atrocities? The artocities were not inflicted upon present day Aboriginals. Present day Aboriginals protest and whinge about our government and their supposed lack of opportunities and services. They protest outside of the Commonwealth Games with banners saying 'Stolenwealth Games', and then demand to be allowed to represent themselves?
Procedural versus outcome equality. 'Disadvantaged' groups (like country folk see agrarian socialism) are given some help. People like pauline hanson believe this is reverse discrimination even when her areas are massive beneficiaries of agrarian socialism due to its disadvantaged and minority status.tully said:I know if I opened up a 'White only' job recruitment place, a white only medical centre and etcetera, I would be branded racist. Funny how it doesn't work the other way round.
No. Not if it happened to her 200 years ago. Also, my Granny is a big girl, she can fight her own battles if she wishes to.I;m sure you believe that you have a right complain or make a noise about something that happened to your grandmother if you feel it was unjust
O rely? It appears to me as though all you ever do is make gross generalisations about what the 'average' Australian thinks. According to your rants in other threads, the average Australian is a redneck yokel who sympathises with Pauline Hanson and wants to burn anything foreign at the stake.It should also be considered that the average Australia will complain about things that never directly affected but affected them by consequence
Come on be fair tully, if anything you posts are all over the place rants that avoid issues by using sarcasm to rebutt arguments.katie_tully said:Dude, sif I even care about your bleeding heart rants anymore.
The use of bleeding heart to label anything that doesn't coincide with your point of view is chiche. In particular when I wasn't being very bleeding heart anyways with my points about the need to cut welfare dependancy. The simply point is that you cannot maintain country socialism practiced by the nationals and then have a winge about the socialism applied to aboriginal people. Well maybe you can have a winge because you feel the socialism practiced on the aboriginals is actually better than that practiced on you.tully said:Next time you happen to have a medical emergency out in the country and you need medical assistance, I hope you're not white coz you're going to be bleeding onto the floor. Unless you're Aboriginal, coz then you can just stroll in to your 'aboriginals only' medical centre and seek immediate assistance.
Stolen generatiuon occured around between 80 and 30 years ago. Not 200.tully said:]No. Not if it happened to her 200 years ago. Also, my Granny is a big girl, she can fight her own battles if she wishes to.
It can be anyone they don't have to be Australia.tully said:O rely? It appears to me as though all you ever do is make gross generalisations about what the 'average' Australian thinks.
The issue is whether you recongise that people are allowed to complain about things that consequently affect them. Whether it happened yesterday or 50 years ago is a question of degree.tully said:The first was by telling me the stolen generation happened 30-80 years ago, and therefore consequentially has bearing on Aboriginals growing up today.
Secondly you refered to my grandmother dying now, and how it would have a consequential impact on me.
Yes. If my grandmother died tomorrow due to a lack of regional medical services, I would be pissed. If an Aboriginals grandmother was stolen from their family tomorrow, I'm sure they could be pissed about it too.
There you go again. Denying people the right to complain about being indirectly affected. I could apply the same argument to a 35 year old woman whoes mother died at birth due to the bad state of medical services in the bush and tell you to such up and get over it.tully said:Those affected by the stolen generation, and those who can lay claim to being affected by it, are those who were actually removed from their families. And indeed many of them have come foward about the situation. They are the ones to whom the apologies are due.
Well obviously in your view the services in the bush have not been fixed.katie_tully said:Er... If my mother died giving birth to me, there would be no use complaining about the state of medical services in the bush in 1971. If they were rectified in 35years I would have no basis for complaint.
Hopefully an improvement in medical services (if you still think medical services are still shit).So my mother died because of inadequate services, complaining about it 35 years later is going to achieve what?
How do bush people or aboriginal people fix the current problem? Winge and complain like you did about the state of non atsi medical services.Getting off your arse and making an example of yourself by fixing the CURRENT problem is so more far effective than constant whinging.
I personally think that in some cases it was done in good faith in others it was not (in reference to 'soothing the dying pillow' and a few ATSI mass killings in the NT and small pox contaminations). I think it was a mix of both good and bad faith.Not-That-Bright said:The stolen generation did occur, I think it was the same sort of logic as women who adopt babies from africa now - they had their hearts in the right place. I mean abuse in Aboriginal families was rife with the explosion of alcoholism, in some cases I would say they did the right thing by taking the kids away.
That doesn't even make sense? The current services are shit. Whether or not they were shit 35 years ago is irrelevant to me. I was not around 35 years ago! Hypothetically if I were, and my mother died because of it, what would scratching my arse saying "Whoa, the services in 1971 were shit, we need to solve that problem!!!" fix?Considering that you think that medical services are still shit today I think you would still complain.