Jillie
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2004
- Messages
- 22
I agree with Merlin's first message. I think it was increadibly brave (and in no way agressive) what he did, to go in front of millions and express his opinion the way he did. And of course it has everything to do with him. I saw somewhere that he had put in for his Australian Citizenship before Big Brother...
His second one was just silly tho - althougth I agree with that message as well, that wasn't really the time to be doing it.
As for the comments made about aboriginal people and their attitudes.. I grew up in a small country town that is known for its 'aborignial population' - and have many friends that are aboriginal, my mother works at an aboriginal corporation. ETC. What I want to say is that aboriginal people don't 'isolate themselves' for the sake of pissing people off. The fact is, they are a different people, with a different culture (to us). A culture which was taken away from them - and cant be given back just like that, whoever said about clearing the land and making them live like they used to - so technically, the present government isn't at fault for the wrongs that were done before (stolen generation etc) - but the leader of the country, the same country that took away their culture, should be showing sympathy and, for gods sake, just appologise for the wrongs that were done, and as a result of those wrongs, still being done.
It is not just aboriginal people who she the situation as a 'black vs white' issue. It is not all one sided here.
And, I cant remember if it was mention before (but it usually always is in a discussion like this) - but there are aboriginal people who have made a go of it, and got somewhere, and aboriginal people who are in the process of doing this. There are aborignials who are proffesionals. Aboriginals "positvely contributing" to Australia. Why you must focus on a percentage of them who are in the jails, or comitting crimes, is just... odd.
It makes you stop and think if maybe their attitudes of "us vs them" are not so completley ridiculous. Or one-sided.
Oh, and twistedd - if a 'white' boy died in the way that the little boy did in Redfern - of course it would make the papers. And if the mother of this white child thought that the police, or a policeman, was to blame - there may not be riots, but there would certainly be outrage and media coverage.
His second one was just silly tho - althougth I agree with that message as well, that wasn't really the time to be doing it.
As for the comments made about aboriginal people and their attitudes.. I grew up in a small country town that is known for its 'aborignial population' - and have many friends that are aboriginal, my mother works at an aboriginal corporation. ETC. What I want to say is that aboriginal people don't 'isolate themselves' for the sake of pissing people off. The fact is, they are a different people, with a different culture (to us). A culture which was taken away from them - and cant be given back just like that, whoever said about clearing the land and making them live like they used to - so technically, the present government isn't at fault for the wrongs that were done before (stolen generation etc) - but the leader of the country, the same country that took away their culture, should be showing sympathy and, for gods sake, just appologise for the wrongs that were done, and as a result of those wrongs, still being done.
It is not just aboriginal people who she the situation as a 'black vs white' issue. It is not all one sided here.
And, I cant remember if it was mention before (but it usually always is in a discussion like this) - but there are aboriginal people who have made a go of it, and got somewhere, and aboriginal people who are in the process of doing this. There are aborignials who are proffesionals. Aboriginals "positvely contributing" to Australia. Why you must focus on a percentage of them who are in the jails, or comitting crimes, is just... odd.
It makes you stop and think if maybe their attitudes of "us vs them" are not so completley ridiculous. Or one-sided.
Oh, and twistedd - if a 'white' boy died in the way that the little boy did in Redfern - of course it would make the papers. And if the mother of this white child thought that the police, or a policeman, was to blame - there may not be riots, but there would certainly be outrage and media coverage.