Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

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Black Orchid
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Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by Black Orchid » Tue Jan 29, 2019 12:12 pm

Who the hell is Yumi Stynes anyway?
Yesterday’s discussion about Australia Day protests turned heated when Kennerley claimed many protesters were ignorant of Aboriginal women and children “being raped”.

Looking down the barrel of the camera, Kennerley said: “OK, the 5000 people who went through the streets making their points known, saying how inappropriate the day is. Has any single one of those people been out to the outback, where children, babies, five-year-olds are being raped? Their mothers are being raped, their sisters are being raped. They get no education. What have you done?”

Stynes fired back that the statements weren’t true and sounded “racist”.

Kennerley fired back: “I’m offended by that, Yumi.”

“Keep going then, because every time you open your mouth you’re sounding racist,” Stynes replied.

The exchange continued, with Kennerley saying at one point: “Just becasue I have a point of view, Yumi, doesn’t mean I’m racist.”

Stynes was booked to appear on the show again today, but posted to her Instagram account she would be absent.

She insisted it wasn’t because of yesterday’s clash.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/busine ... 1548723134

Stating facts is not being racist yet these lunatic lefty progressives are only capable of flinging out words like racist, bigot, islamophobe etc etc etc to try to stifle discussion and limit freedom of speech.

Why?

Because they have NO rational argument nor response to the truth. They can't face the truth and instead run around waving their arms in the air and spewing out nonsensities.

Why don't you normal old time lefties throw these lunatics out? They have hijacked your party and made it a joke. They are an embarrassment.

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Serial Brain 9
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by Serial Brain 9 » Tue Jan 29, 2019 12:23 pm

HOW is Kerri-Anne racist by showing concern about aboriginal welfare?

What type of person thinks that aboriginal Mothers, Children and babies being raped is acceptable?

Yumi is the Racists if she thinks this is ok - “its only aboriginals being raped”

The very people that try to help and expose these crimes are being labeled racist with this Leftist Mentality - Take Brian for instance. :roll:
And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.

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brian ross
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by brian ross » Tue Jan 29, 2019 1:42 pm

She is being racist because she is stating she believes that all Indigenous women and babies are raped, continually. They aren't. Rape is a difficult crime to identify at the best of times but Indigenous reporting of rape isn't significantly higher than for non-Indigenous populations in Australia.

BTW, the overwhelming majority of Indigenous Australians don't live in "remote communities" either. They live, well adjusted, law-abiding lives in urban communities, with non-Indigenous neighbours. To even believe otherwise is Racist in tone.

What I find interesting is that I keep having to make posts like this. You lot cannot even identify Racism when it bites you on the bum, now can you? :roll:
Nationalism is not to be confused with patriotism. - Eric Blair

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Black Orchid
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by Black Orchid » Tue Jan 29, 2019 1:59 pm

brian ross wrote:
Tue Jan 29, 2019 1:42 pm
She is being racist because she is stating she believes that all Indigenous women and babies are raped, continually.
Brian you really are a moron. That is NOT what she said and definitely NOT what she meant.

It is people like you who perpetuate the abuse by not addressing it. :S

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brian ross
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by brian ross » Tue Jan 29, 2019 2:05 pm

She is the one abusing Indigenous people by assuming that Rape is commonplace in Indigenous communities, Black Orchid. When you actually understand what "Racism" means, you'll be half way to understanding how she is being Racist.

Kennerly who was once famous because she was a TV celebratory. When was she last in the outback, in a remote Indigenous community, hey? :roll:
Nationalism is not to be confused with patriotism. - Eric Blair

cods
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by cods » Tue Jan 29, 2019 4:03 pm

brian ross wrote:
Tue Jan 29, 2019 2:05 pm
She is the one abusing Indigenous people by assuming that Rape is commonplace in Indigenous communities, Black Orchid. When you actually understand what "Racism" means, you'll be half way to understanding how she is being Racist.

Kennerly who was once famous because she was a TV celebratory. When was she last in the outback, in a remote Indigenous community, hey? :roll:
styles lost it all she had was harking back claiming how much damage it has done to todays generation...what a load of claptrap...Invasion Day zzzzzzzzzzzz....it so help me is never going to go away change the date change the name blank it from the history books.....

it is never going to go away....

as for abuse of women and children... for anyone to say it isnt bad is one sick dude..



PEOPLE

Domestic and family violence
An Aboriginal woman is 45 times more likely to experience domestic violence than a white woman. Violence patterns are passed on from parents to their children.



Source: Domestic and family violence - Creative Spirits, retrieved from https://www.creativespirits.info/aborig ... y-violence


the other lady on the program made so much more sense... a very impressive speaker.... and to me she looked more aboriginal than styles...

I am sorry but if you want whitey to give a stuff..... you need to get people who havent got their heads buried in the past...

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Serial Brain 9
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by Serial Brain 9 » Tue Jan 29, 2019 4:09 pm

Thank you for allowing this continued abuse Brian - people like you should be ashamed of yourselves - but it appears that you have no shame and like all leftist turn a blind eye to this blight in Aboriginal history.
Culture of denial

By TRADITION IS NO EXCUSE FOR THE EPIDEMIC OF MALE VIOLENCE AND SEXUAL ABUSE THAT IS OBLITERATING INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES. BY LOUIS NOWRA

I spent several days in the Alice Springs hospital after falling ill while attending a friend's wedding. I shared a ward with a middle-aged Aboriginal man who was quite proud that he had raped a 13-year-old girl. As he said, "She wouldn't say yes, so I f---ed her hard."

It did not surprise me. A few years before, I was in Alice Springs talking to two Aboriginal men in their early 70s. They were preparing to go into town to buy plastic toy dinosaurs. This was to pay a 12-year-old girl for having sex with both of them at the same time.

What amazed me was their lack of shame or even simple embarrassment. What disturbed me even more was that the most common sight in the hospital was Aboriginal women and girls with severe injuries suffered during domestic violence. Some of their faces looked as though an incompetent butcher had conducted plastic surgery with a hammer and saw. The fear in their eyes reminded me of dogs whipped into cringing submission. The confronting evidence of what men had done to the women was almost unbearable.

About 20 years ago an Aboriginal woman told me she had been raped at the age of seven by her uncle and grandfather on a town rubbish tip. As I was to discover as my circle of Aboriginal friends and acquaintances grew, sexual abuse was not uncommon -- and in some communities it was rife -- from the 1960s onwards.

Another friend told me that at the age of 10 he had been thrown into a wardrobe where his uncle masturbated him and then forced him to perform oral sex. Several other "uncles" also abused him through the years. I heard of many more such incidents and not one of these men ever had to go to court for their actions.

After I had recovered from my stay in Alice Springs hospital I was alarmed to read of a middle-aged Aboriginal man who anally raped a 14-year-old girl whom, he said, had been promised to him. Northern Territory Chief Justice Brian Martin sentenced him to detention for the duration of the court session.

It seemed to me that Aboriginal men were using the defence of cultural traditions to get away with rape and murder. But it's not only that. The statistics on Aboriginal domestic violence and sexual abuse are so much worse than in the general population, as has been highlighted in the 40 reports produced on the issue since 1999. All the statistics and case studies I refer to in this piece are sourced from federal and state government reports, court proceedings, newspaper articles and books, and are expanded on in my new book, Bad Dreaming (Pluto Press), which also contains an extensive bibliography.

The Alice Springs hospital provides a clear example: about 800 Aboriginal women were treated for domestic assault last year, up from 351 in 1999. The rate of domestic assault in indigenous communities is eight to 10 times that of non-indigenous communities and the sexual abuse of girls is so widespread that one-third of 13-year-old girls in the NT are infected with chlamydia and gonorrhoea. In fact, the situation has become a calamity.

But even more disturbing is that while some Aborigines are being recognised as wonderful painters, photographers, actors, filmmakers, footballers and dancers, indigenous communities are breaking down under the strain of male violence and sexual brutality. As Aboriginal elder Mick Dodson has said: "This is not just our problem; this is everyone's problem."

After the arrival of the First Fleet explorers and settlers wrote about the violence they saw Aboriginal men inflict on women. They also observed how the men kidnapped women from other tribes, raped them and forced them to become their wives.


By the end of the 19th century, the new discipline of anthropology began to study Aboriginal culture and society in detail, and with much sympathy and respect. It is in these studies that we gain a clearer picture of the relationship between Aboriginal men and women.
And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.

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Black Orchid
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by Black Orchid » Tue Jan 29, 2019 4:11 pm

cods wrote:
Tue Jan 29, 2019 4:03 pm
the other lady on the program made so much more sense... a very impressive speaker.... and to me she looked more aboriginal than styles...
I don't think Stynes is aboriginal. I think her mother is Japanese. No idea about the father but highly doubtful he is aboriginal.

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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by sprintcyclist » Tue Jan 29, 2019 4:42 pm

I bet a lot of those kids wish they had been taken away by whites at birth
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brian ross
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Re: Kerri-Anne v Yumi Stynes

Post by brian ross » Tue Jan 29, 2019 5:11 pm

Serial Brain 9 wrote:
Tue Jan 29, 2019 4:09 pm
Thank you for allowing this continued abuse Brian - people like you should be ashamed of yourselves - but it appears that you have no shame and like all leftist turn a blind eye to this blight in Aboriginal history.
Care to quote me where I state I allow this abuse to continue, Serial? Please stop erecting strawman arguments. It is pointless making them as you're the only one who believes it.

I was merely stating that Rape was not as commonplace as Kennely believes. Simples, really. Time to stop claiming all Indigenous Australians are hard done by is what I'd suggest. Many are, not all are though. Invasion Day belongs on in NSW where it is there foundation day. 1 January is the foundation day for the nation of Australia. It is when Australia Day should be celebrate. QED.
Nationalism is not to be confused with patriotism. - Eric Blair

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