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Australians have far too much in common to divide over a treaty : Comments
By Gary Johns, published 15/12/2016It is hard to pick the instant when the movement to recognise Aborigines in the Constitution died. There were signposts.
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In fact, looking back, if, as it seems, the Protector was adhering to the pro-Aboriginal policies of the provincial (State) government, then I would have no quarrel with any of those policies. Sometimes the language used by the Protector was a bit abrupt, a bit impatient with some of the incessant demands made and innovative lurks perpetrated, but bureaucratic jargon was much less creative in those days. He got things done, and I wonder if those two factors are correlated.
Clearly, Aboriginal people are making use of the series of conferences to have their head, to put forward their wish-list of what they want from the rest of Australians. After fifty-odd years observing the Aboriginal political scene, I can't avoid the conclusion that Aboriginal 'leaders' are amazingly inept at both stating their aims to the Australian people (who must make their judgements in a referendum) and in controlling the more 'radical' wings of the Aboriginal movement.
But at least we know now what many - by no means all - Aboriginal people, especially wannabe 'leaders', DON'T want: they don't want equal rights, they want superior rights; they don't want reconciliation, they want domination; they don't want an end to discrimination, but a renewal of forms of Apartheid. Yes, sometimes the political naivete of Aboriginal leaders is breath-taking.
So many don't want understanding and togetherness: they want power - power with benefits, the eternal financial benefits from the Canberra money trees.
I'm forced to suspect that, in fact, what many Aboriginal 'leaders' and wannabes want is a permanent Indigenous mass-welfare society, a rentier society. They WANT a Gap, never to be Closed. They WANT discrimination, i.e. some permanent form of 'recognition through discrimination'.
Might this explain the hostility to celebration of Indigenous successes in higher education ?
[TBC]