Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
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Don't poop in these threads. This isn't Europe, okay? There are rules here!
Don't poop in these threads. This isn't Europe, okay? There are rules here!
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
Booty doesn't look very hard.
Ita's influence can be seen here as this is quite a balanced article.
It's not just Australia Day — national holidays are 'almost always political'
ABC Radio National By Joey Watson Updated 16 minutes ago
PHOTO: A sign saying "change the date" with the word date crossed out and replaced with "system". Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people see January 26 as "Invasion Day" or "Survival Day". (ABC News: Bridget Brennan)
RELATED STORY: Australia Day 2020 focuses on generosity of Australian spirit
RELATED STORY: Australia Day can be a time for hope, not resentment
RELATED STORY: 'Have it both ways': Melbourne council to hold Australia Day 'morning of mourning'
RELATED STORY: Change the date or abolish it: Australia Day protesters
Australia Day, which commemorates the landing of the First Fleet at Sydney Cove, has become a source of deep division and debate.
In recent years many have called for a new national holiday that respects the experience of Indigenous Australians — though others believe the January 26 date should stay put.
And while few other national days attract the same controversy as Australia Day, the politics around the celebration are an example of a global trend.
"National days and national celebrations are part of a national narrative, and these are almost always political," political psychologist James Liu says.
So what do national days represent in comparable countries?
How does Australia Day survive?
Read on here...
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-01-24/ ... d/11886420
Ita's influence can be seen here as this is quite a balanced article.
It's not just Australia Day — national holidays are 'almost always political'
ABC Radio National By Joey Watson Updated 16 minutes ago
PHOTO: A sign saying "change the date" with the word date crossed out and replaced with "system". Many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people see January 26 as "Invasion Day" or "Survival Day". (ABC News: Bridget Brennan)
RELATED STORY: Australia Day 2020 focuses on generosity of Australian spirit
RELATED STORY: Australia Day can be a time for hope, not resentment
RELATED STORY: 'Have it both ways': Melbourne council to hold Australia Day 'morning of mourning'
RELATED STORY: Change the date or abolish it: Australia Day protesters
Australia Day, which commemorates the landing of the First Fleet at Sydney Cove, has become a source of deep division and debate.
In recent years many have called for a new national holiday that respects the experience of Indigenous Australians — though others believe the January 26 date should stay put.
And while few other national days attract the same controversy as Australia Day, the politics around the celebration are an example of a global trend.
"National days and national celebrations are part of a national narrative, and these are almost always political," political psychologist James Liu says.
So what do national days represent in comparable countries?
How does Australia Day survive?
Read on here...
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-01-24/ ... d/11886420
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
There are articles galore on Australia Day on the NEW cleansed ABC returning to its Public Charter.
Invasion Day protests held around country as debate over Australia Day continues
Updated 26 Jan 2019, 5:49pm
VIDEO: Protesters explain why they want Australia Day to be marked in a different way. (ABC News) https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-26/ ... s/10753442
RELATED STORY: Australia Day can be a time for hope, not resentment
RELATED STORY: Australia Day celebrated with citizenship events, parades, billy cart races and a day at the beach
RELATED STORY: Indigenous superhero Kyle fights stereotypes — just in time for Australia Day
RELATED STORY: Today show reporter and Gamilaroi woman Brooke Boney reignites debate around Australia Day date
Thousands of protesters have gathered around the country, calling for changes to the way the nation marks Australia Day.
Key points:
Thousands gathered at Victoria's Parliament House to protest Australia Day this morning
Some wanted a date change, others called for the holiday to be abandoned
About two dozen people gathered to protest Australia Day on London's Westminster Bridge
January 26 marks the anniversary of Captain Arthur Philip arriving with the First Fleet in Port Jackson, New South Wales, a date now seen by many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as "Invasion Day" or "Survival Day".
Those at Saturday's rallies said the day marks the theft and dispossession of Indigenous people, and should not be celebrated.
They gathered by the thousands throughout Australia, holding up banners on the steps of Parliament House in Victoria, marching through Hyde Park in Sydney and converging on Brisbane's CBD.
PHOTO: Protesters held their fists in the air at the rally in Brisbane. (ABC News: Lucy Murray)
Read on here...
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-26/ ... e/10752882
Invasion Day protests held around country as debate over Australia Day continues
Updated 26 Jan 2019, 5:49pm
VIDEO: Protesters explain why they want Australia Day to be marked in a different way. (ABC News) https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-26/ ... s/10753442
RELATED STORY: Australia Day can be a time for hope, not resentment
RELATED STORY: Australia Day celebrated with citizenship events, parades, billy cart races and a day at the beach
RELATED STORY: Indigenous superhero Kyle fights stereotypes — just in time for Australia Day
RELATED STORY: Today show reporter and Gamilaroi woman Brooke Boney reignites debate around Australia Day date
Thousands of protesters have gathered around the country, calling for changes to the way the nation marks Australia Day.
Key points:
Thousands gathered at Victoria's Parliament House to protest Australia Day this morning
Some wanted a date change, others called for the holiday to be abandoned
About two dozen people gathered to protest Australia Day on London's Westminster Bridge
January 26 marks the anniversary of Captain Arthur Philip arriving with the First Fleet in Port Jackson, New South Wales, a date now seen by many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as "Invasion Day" or "Survival Day".
Those at Saturday's rallies said the day marks the theft and dispossession of Indigenous people, and should not be celebrated.
They gathered by the thousands throughout Australia, holding up banners on the steps of Parliament House in Victoria, marching through Hyde Park in Sydney and converging on Brisbane's CBD.
PHOTO: Protesters held their fists in the air at the rally in Brisbane. (ABC News: Lucy Murray)
Read on here...
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-26/ ... e/10752882
- The Reboot
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
Balanced? You didn't read those articles, did you.
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
But Booty you are used to the OLD ABC where minority views were given precedence.
- Redneck
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
It should be renamed FUCK YOU COONS day!
Get over it and go and get a job you lazy bums!
Get over it and go and get a job you lazy bums!
- Neferti
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- Posts: 1355
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
Does resorting to profanity suggest a disturbed mind ?
Now even more Australia Day celebration from the revamped purged cleansed ABC.
Australia Day can be a time for hope, not resentment
By Stan Grant Posted 26 Jan 2019, 6:00am
PHOTO: Stan Grant is a First Nations Australian and ABC Indigenous Affairs Analyst. (ABC News)
RELATED STORY: When Matthew Flinders circumnavigated Australia, Bungaree was with him all the way
RELATED STORY: There are two reactions to Captain Cook today and both are angry. Things were different in 1970
Hope. On this Australia Day, that's what I'm thinking about: hope.
Odd, maybe — I am an Indigenous person — Kamilaroi, Wiradjuri, Dharrawall, to be more specific and respectful — you might expect me to talk about trauma, invasion, colonisation.
Certainly, those things cannot be ignored; those things that the Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz once called "the memory of wounds".
These wounds are real; for so many, the legacy of this country's history hangs like a dead weight.
Where is hope? When we are reminded almost daily of the tragedy of Aboriginal youth suicide; children as young as 10 years old who cannot face another day of life in our country.
Yet, without hope, where are we?
Hope is the oxygen in our blood; resentment is its poison.
German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche wrote about the resentful man, caught in a time warp, returning always to the source of injustice that he cannot fix and does not want to fix.
History, for him, is a festering wound, to be picked at over and over, never allowing it to heal. His suffering is his strength; his weakness the greatest weapon he has over his oppressor:
"His soul squints; his mind loves hidden crannies, tortuous paths and backdoors […] he is past master in silence, in not forgetting …"
PHOTO: Indigenous boys waving Union Jacks greet Queen Elizabeth in Cooktown in 1970. (Queensland State Archives)
Read on here...
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-26/ ... y/10747000
Now even more Australia Day celebration from the revamped purged cleansed ABC.
Australia Day can be a time for hope, not resentment
By Stan Grant Posted 26 Jan 2019, 6:00am
PHOTO: Stan Grant is a First Nations Australian and ABC Indigenous Affairs Analyst. (ABC News)
RELATED STORY: When Matthew Flinders circumnavigated Australia, Bungaree was with him all the way
RELATED STORY: There are two reactions to Captain Cook today and both are angry. Things were different in 1970
Hope. On this Australia Day, that's what I'm thinking about: hope.
Odd, maybe — I am an Indigenous person — Kamilaroi, Wiradjuri, Dharrawall, to be more specific and respectful — you might expect me to talk about trauma, invasion, colonisation.
Certainly, those things cannot be ignored; those things that the Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz once called "the memory of wounds".
These wounds are real; for so many, the legacy of this country's history hangs like a dead weight.
Where is hope? When we are reminded almost daily of the tragedy of Aboriginal youth suicide; children as young as 10 years old who cannot face another day of life in our country.
Yet, without hope, where are we?
Hope is the oxygen in our blood; resentment is its poison.
German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche wrote about the resentful man, caught in a time warp, returning always to the source of injustice that he cannot fix and does not want to fix.
History, for him, is a festering wound, to be picked at over and over, never allowing it to heal. His suffering is his strength; his weakness the greatest weapon he has over his oppressor:
"His soul squints; his mind loves hidden crannies, tortuous paths and backdoors […] he is past master in silence, in not forgetting …"
PHOTO: Indigenous boys waving Union Jacks greet Queen Elizabeth in Cooktown in 1970. (Queensland State Archives)
Read on here...
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-26/ ... y/10747000
- Neferti
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
Stan Grant looks VERY tanned, has he been holidaying at the beach somewhere?
- Valkie
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
We SHOUKD simply ban greenies.
And make them fill in a 30 page document and charge a cost to any protests, that will stop the abbos.
And make them fill in a 30 page document and charge a cost to any protests, that will stop the abbos.
I have a dream
A world free from the plague of Islam
A world that has never known the horrors of the cult of death.
My hope is that in time, Islam will be nothing but a bad dream
A world free from the plague of Islam
A world that has never known the horrors of the cult of death.
My hope is that in time, Islam will be nothing but a bad dream
- The Reboot
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Re: Shamed Greenies still want to BAN Australia Day
For fuck's sake make up your mind which way you "swing". One minute you criticize the ABC for lefty bias, the next you stick up for it.
Nah. It's called being Australian!
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