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Ethan Allen Hawley

Joined: 04 Jun 2006
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Posted: Thu Oct 23, 2008 11:50 pm Post subject: Hey Whitie: think you got it hard, being a minority here?! |
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Under cover of racist myth, a new land grab in Australia
Claims of child abuse are proving a fertile pretext to menace the Aboriginal communities lying in the way of uranium mining
o John Pilger
o The Guardian,
o Friday October 24 2008
Its banks secured in the warmth of the southern spring, Australia is not news. It ought to be. An epic scandal of racism, injustice and brutality is being covered up in the manner of apartheid South Africa. Many Australians conspire in this silence, wishing never to reflect upon the truth about their society's Untermenschen, the Aboriginal people.
The facts are not in dispute: thousands of black Australians never reach the age of 40; an entirely preventable disease, trachoma, blinds black children as epidemics of rheumatic fever ravage their communities; suicide among the despairing young is common. No other developed country has such a record. A pervasive white myth, that Aborigines leech off the state, serves to conceal the disgrace that money the federal government says it spends on indigenous affairs actually goes towards opposing native land rights. In 2006, some A$3bn was underspent "or the result of creative accounting", reported the Sydney Morning Herald. Like the children of apartheid, the Aboriginal children of Thamarrurr in the Northern Territory receive less than half the educational resources allotted to white children.
In 2005, the UN committee on the elimination of racial discrimination described the racism of the Australian state, a distinction afforded no other developed country. This was in the decade-long rule of the conservative coalition of John Howard, whose coterie of white supremacist academics and journalists assaulted the truth of recorded genocide in Australia, especially the horrific separations of Aboriginal children from their families. They deployed arguments not dissimilar to those David Irving used to promote Holocaust denial.
Smear by media as a precursor to the latest round of repression is long familiar to black Australians. In 2006, the flagship current affairs programme of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Lateline, broadcast lurid allegations of "sex slavery" among the Mutitjulu people in the Northern Territory. The programme's source, described as an "anonymous youth worker", was later exposed as a federal government official whose "evidence" was discredited by the Northern Territory chief minister and the police.
The ABC has never retracted its allegations, claiming it has been "exonerated by an internal inquiry". Shortly before last year's election, Howard declared a "national emergency" and sent the army to the Northern Territory to "protect the children" who, said his minister for indigenous affairs, were being abused in "unthinkable numbers".
Last February, with much sentimental fanfare, the new prime minister, Labor's Kevin Rudd, made a formal apology to the first Australians. Australia was said to be finally coming to terms with its rapacious past and present. Was it? "The Rudd government," noted a Sydney Morning Herald editorial, "has moved quickly to clear away this piece of political wreckage in a way that responds to some of its own supporters' emotional needs, yet it changes nothing. It is a shrewd manoeuvre."
In May, barely reported government statistics revealed that of the 7,433 Aboriginal children examined by doctors as part of the "national emergency", 39 had been referred to the authorities for suspected abuse. Of those, a maximum of just four possible cases of abuse were identified. Such were the "unthinkable numbers". They were little different from those of child abuse in white Australia. What was different was that no soldiers invaded the beachside suburbs, no white parents were swept aside, no white welfare was "quarantined". Marion Scrymgour, an Aboriginal minister in the Northern Territory, said: "To see decent, caring [Aboriginal] fathers, uncles, brothers and grandfathers, who are undoubtedly innocent of the horrific charges being bandied about, reduced to helplessness and tears, speaks to me of widespread social damage."
What the doctors found they already knew - children at risk from a spectrum of extreme poverty and the denial of resources in one of the world's richest countries. Having let a few crumbs fall, Rudd is picking up where Howard left off. His indigenous affairs minister, Jenny Macklin, has threatened to withdraw government support from remote communities that are "economically unviable". The Northern Territory is the only region where Aborigines have comprehensive land rights, granted almost by accident 30 years ago. Here lie some of the world's biggest uranium deposits. Canberra wants to mine and sell it.
Foreign governments, especially the US, want the Northern Territory as a toxic dump. The Adelaide to Darwin railway that runs adjacent to Olympic Dam, the world's largest uranium mine, was built with the help of Kellogg, Brown & Root - a subsidiary of American giant Halliburton, the alma mater of Dick Cheney, Howard's "mate". "The land grab of Aboriginal tribal land has nothing to do with child sexual abuse," says the Australian scientist Helen Caldicott, "but all to do with open slather uranium mining and converting the Northern Territory to a global nuclear dump."
What is unique about Australia is not its sun-baked, derivative society, clinging to the sea, but its first people, the oldest on earth, whose skill and courage in surviving invasion, of which the current onslaught is merely the latest, deserve humanity's support.
www.johnpilger.com
www.guardian.co.uk |
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billybrobby

Joined: 09 Dec 2004
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 12:02 am Post subject: |
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Way to shoehorn a unrelated issue into a Living in Korea forum.
But, really, don't remind everybody about the racism that blacks face. It makes our "some children yelled hello at me today" whining seem even more petty. |
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Scotticus
Joined: 18 Mar 2007
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 12:28 am Post subject: |
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billybrobby wrote: |
But, really, don't remind everybody about the racism that blacks face. It makes our "some children yelled hello at me today" whining seem even more petty. |
And really, if there's any problem in the world that's worse than the one you want to complain about, you should just shut your mouth and be happy you're not <insert worse-off group here>. |
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Ethan Allen Hawley

Joined: 04 Jun 2006
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 12:47 am Post subject: |
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Hey Scotti,
Which part of Brisbane did you say you were from again? |
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Newbie

Joined: 07 Feb 2003
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 1:09 am Post subject: |
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Couldn't be bothered to read your article, but regarding your post title: I'm white and I feel like a god here. Amazing how much people like me.
All the whiners on Dave: they're just ugly, fat, have long hair, and dress bad. Get rid of all of that, and Korea's a breeze. |
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billybrobby

Joined: 09 Dec 2004
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 1:15 am Post subject: |
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Scotticus wrote: |
billybrobby wrote: |
But, really, don't remind everybody about the racism that blacks face. It makes our "some children yelled hello at me today" whining seem even more petty. |
And really, if there's any problem in the world that's worse than the one you want to complain about, you should just shut your mouth and be happy you're not <insert worse-off group here>. |
You know, when you restate my argument like that, it seems less valid. It almost seems like a totally different argument. |
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Hobophobic

Joined: 16 Aug 2004 Location: Sinjeong negorie mokdong oh ga ri samgyup sal fighting
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 1:25 am Post subject: |
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Newbie wrote: |
Couldn't be bothered to read your article, but regarding your post title: I'm white and I feel like a god here. Amazing how much people like me.
All the whiners on Dave: they're just ugly, fat, have long hair, and dress bad. Get rid of all of that, and Korea's a breeze. |
I take offense...I am not fat, nor do I have long hair...my Canada patch is secure on my manbag....je me souviens! Did you hear the Won is not doing so well?
M-su holds a mirror for me, Spliff does my online shopping, Kentucker4 told me how to bait bigfoot, Grotto checked over my contract, Jinju took my picture, Jongroguru named a plant after me, Miss Seoul translates, and Princess added me on Cyworld....I could go on but I don't do Dave's after 7pm on Fridays. |
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bacasper

Joined: 26 Mar 2007
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Posted: Fri Oct 24, 2008 6:14 am Post subject: |
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"For the good of the children" has historically been used as the false pretext by repressive governments in many ways, including passing bad or unpalatable laws, or as justification for raids on otherwise law-abiding groups governments have felt in some way to be threatening. It is a primary reason that the issue of "child abuse" is kept in the limelight to be brought out and utilized as necessary.
The current issue of The Journal of Homosexuality has an article which addresses this. Here is the abstract of "The Political Use and Abuse of the 'Pedophile:'"
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The cognitive/affective construct designated by the term �pedophile� is delineated on the basis of how he is presented in the popular media. His salient characteristics are listed and then examined in the light of scientific and historical data. The �pedophile� is discovered to be a �social construct that floats in the thin air of fantasy.� Since the truth-value of the construct �pedophile� approaches zero, we are confronted with the question of why he continues to be such a central and emotionally fraught aspect of American culture. The answer to this question is found in his political usefulness. Specifically, the religious right uses him to further its agenda of sexual repression, and the political right uses him to dismantle the machinery of a free society. |
The dynamic appears to be similar in Australia. |
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