Anyone who keeps using their own cultural paradigm to judge others and expect them to conform to their way of seeing the world is perpetuating the problem.
EG: Of course Aboriginal people don't have written title deeds to their land in the form you are suggesting they should have. ...Seriously?
There are however cases whereby significant works of art have represented Aboriginal title.
EG: The Ngurrara Canvas, which was recently unfurled in home country 20 years after it was painted for a native title case in 1996.
Giant Indigenous artwork returns to Australian desert after 20 years - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
Nothing you have quoted here is any different from disadvantaged white communities. But thank you for posting. Your last comment, is true. When aboriginals gain the education, and confidence, not to be ripped off by white carpet baggers, things might change. However, it seems to me that
there is an industry , ripping off the billions of dollars going into aboriginal affairs, and I believe that gullible, or greedy aboriginal managers of some of these assets are taking advantage of this. No different from any other human, really. They have just evolved, and learned quick.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
Gday Mick,
Sadly for the aboriginal people , the only scheme's that seem to be put up are " white man scheme's " I don't see the so called Captain's picks and the rest of the great saviours of the indigenous people , that go into politics coming up with plans to fix these problems and stop the cycle before it starts. With the younger generation of all walks of life wanting to move away from their traditional land or home , we have to adopt systems that cover all people regardless of colour, religion or even gender these days, its just the evolution of life.
I don't have the answers , but I would rather try something than just write it off because it was thought up in a different place or by someone of a different colour. I don't think just throwing endless amounts of $$ at something and hoping it will go away is the answer either.
I would just like to see more effort from the leaders of the indigenous people coming forward and trying to make a difference. I hope I am wrong and it is happening , but from where I sit I am not seeing it. Its very easy to blame someone else for your problems, ie, governments , Lawyers , etc etc , but its leadership and direction that's needed and it needs to come from all sides not just 1.
I don't believe in dwelling on the past , sure accept it and try and improve it and certainly don't make the same mistakes , but to think that the indigenous people could go back to how life was 1000 , 10,000 20,000 yrs ago is crazy. I am led to believe the oldest culture on the planet , its a culture we should embrace and help it move forward , and that includes the people who want to live on country and those who want to become city slickers. It should be about smarter business plans if the remote communities are trying things and they are failing. When it comes to remote indigenous communities we shouldn't be having a competition about "show what place was a success , and what wasn't " , we should be finding out why 1 succeeded and what caused the other to fail. The idea is to make the community support itself and give people back some pride and dignity that they are achieving something , not just labelled as a bunch of Dole bludgers.
I don't think this will happen in my life time and prolly pipe dream stuff but I hope it does. Personally I don't see reconciliation ever happening in the current climate because I believe there are parties on both sides that don't want it to, as the gravy train is just to good in its current form.
Cheers Ean
Aboriginal leaders are constantly showing the way, but then they are constantly disrespected by paternslistic governments and their majority voters. Examples are very easy to find if you care to inform yourself.
One of the latest shameful examples:
Indigenous recognition: Turnbull Government's rejection of Uluru Statement from the heart indefensible - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Saying 'I don't have the answers', 'it probably won't change in my lifetime' and 'we need to make them' do this or that is paternalistic, disrespectful and just a cop out. ...Every single person has the ability to start with the basics, listen to Aboriginal people's perspectives with an open mind, accept that many people have different world views than your own and that is something to cherish and learn from, write a letter to your local member, the PM, don't vote for any party that doesn't respect Aboriginal people. We can all take responsibility for our own actions and words. It all helps (or hinders).
Well written, Ean. I have always thought the starting point would be a Royal Commission into billions of dollars thrown at the aboriginal " problem ", a forensic audit going back to square one, tasked with finding out what may have worked, and why, and what didn't, and where the money went. And why aboriginal communities are not much better off now, than in the beginning, or which communities have prospered, and why. For this to work, there would have to be an amnesty given to all players, if they come to the Commission and tell all about any corruption they know about. However I feel there are too many fingers in the pie, and the pie tastes too good. The only way to quell those suspicions is to bring it all out in the open. Pigs might fly, I guess.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
The money isn't 'thrown at Aboriginal people' - it's generally thrown at government departments which squander it without proper consultation or empowering people to help themselves.
id like to see a royal commission into defence and mandatory detention expenditure.
I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food
A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking
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