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Gags, guillotines create a chamber of horrors : Comments
By Graham Ring, published 28/7/2006The much-maligned Senate has a key role to play in the prosecution of Indigenous justice.
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If that were true, there might be some marginal validity in this piece. As it is, the claim is demonstrably untrue. I invite the author to check with the Institute of Public Affairs and several other organisations who clearly demonstrated to the Federal Senate Poverty Inquiry that the figures they kept insisting on were untrue, unfounded and disowned even by their original authors in the ABS.
That particular committee, as with so many, was simply an opportunity for non-government parties to force blatantly anti-government rhetoric into a report that has since sat unread by anyone other than those who like to quote from it for the same reasons it was written - that their agenda needs spurious and distorted research to "back up" their socio-political claims.
There is certainly no more interest on the part of Senators to find out what "is really happening" in Indigenous Affairs than there is on the part of indigenous leaders to tell what "is really happening". When have any of dozens of well-known indigenous leaders come out in public and condemned Aboriginal sexism, violence, baby-rapes or even financial misappropriations and malfeasance?
Write a confessional piece about the millions of dollars of taxpayer money wasted, embezzled or "unaccounted for" in Aboriginal organisations and I'll take you seriously about putting things on the public record. Tell about the extent of indigenous ignorance, idleness, bludging and brutality and I'll applaud. Then we can start talking about more serious answers to those issues than relying on the unrepresentative swill who make up the Senate.