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The Forum > General Discussion > The rise of the Blak National parliament

The rise of the Blak National parliament

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POOR ABORIGINALS WE COLONIZERS TREAT THEM BADLY ACCORDING TO THE YES CAMPAIGN.
Posted by Josephus, Monday, 2 October 2023 2:46:20 PM
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Josephus,

This is for you:

http://news.un.org/en/story/2023/04/1135827#
Posted by Foxy, Monday, 2 October 2023 3:50:42 PM
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Hi Foxy,

Proud Boy Jose' was content to see Aboriginal people marginalised in camps on river banks, black settlements etc, dying of preventable diaereses such as Tuberculosis and Leprosy, which had been eradicated in the White population years before. Now he comes on here and has the audacity to claim he is some kind of; "friend of the black fella", what a sick joke that is.

BTW, can you give me the names of those on this Forum who are advocating a 'NO' vote, you consider have ever posted anything remotely indicating their concern for the welfare of our black brothers and Sisters? Please don't laugh at the question, I'm being serious.
Posted by Paul1405, Monday, 2 October 2023 4:36:20 PM
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Dear Paul,

Its hard to tell how people are going to vote.
People often change their minds inside a polling
booth. As for anyone's concerns about Indigenous
people - I'll let their posting records speak for
themselves. (smile).
Posted by Foxy, Monday, 2 October 2023 5:18:15 PM
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I see Foxy's as uncaring and self serving- finding fault but not finding real solutions. But there you go.
Posted by Canem Malum, Monday, 2 October 2023 5:34:57 PM
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Hannah McGlade is a deprived poor aboriginal individual who is oppressed by the Colonizers?

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born 6 June 1969
Perth, Western Australia
Academic background
Alma mater Murdoch University (LL.B., LL.M.)
Curtin University (PhD)
Thesis Aboriginal child sexual assault (CSA) and the criminal justice system: the last frontier (2010/2011)
Doctoral advisor Linda Briskman
Academic work
Discipline Indigenous Australian studies
Sub-discipline Indigenous human rights
Indigenous law
Racial discrimination law
Institutions Curtin University
Member of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues
for the Pacific
Incumbent
Assumed office
1 January 2020
As of May 2022 is an associate professor at Curtin University's law school. She was appointed Senior Indigenous Fellow at the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in 2016 and has been a member of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues since 2020.

Early life and education
McGlade was born on 6 June 1969 in Perth, Western Australia. She is a Kurin Minang Noongar woman of the Bibulman nation, an Aboriginal Australian people whose traditional lands are located on the southwestern coast of Western Australia.

At Murdoch University, McGlade completed a Bachelor of Laws in 1995 (making her the first Aboriginal woman to graduate from this university[4] and the first to graduate from any WA law school. She was admitted as a solicitor and barrister of the Supreme Court of Western Australia in 1996.[4]

In 2011 she received her Doctor of Philosophy for her thesis, "Aboriginal child sexual assault (CSA) and the criminal justice system: the last frontier", under doctoral adviser Linda Briskman. The thesis won the Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) Stanner Award, which is "presented biennially to the best academic manuscript submitted by an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander author". Due to this win, the thesis was published as a book in 2012 with the title Our Greatest Challenge: Aboriginal children and human rights.

Academic career
In 2016, she was appointed Senior Indigenous Research Fellow at Curtin, and is as of May 2022 an associate professor at Curtin Law School.
Posted by Josephus, Tuesday, 3 October 2023 8:09:39 AM
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