Anna Marshall - 23
February 2004
The solution lies in first recognising the
true problem. What we are looking at is the
degradation and destruction of a race -
Aboriginal genocide.
Background
Aboriginal genocide had its beginning with
Federal Liberal Party member William Wentworth's
private members bill to amend the Constitution
to remove the prohibition on the commonwealth
making "special laws" relating to "the
Aboriginal race".
The referendum was passed in 1967 and
Wentworth became the first Minister for
Aboriginal Affairs. He initiated the passive
welfare and separatist policies. Wentworth
rejected the traditional Coalition policy of
assimilation and replaced it with the current
policy of ethnic separatism.
Wentworth was no doubt influenced by bleeding
hearts such as H.C. (Nugget) Coombs who was
noisily agitating for a separate nation for
Aborigines to set up a hunter-gatherer utopia.
Gough Whitlam secured the votes of the
elites, do-gooders, academics and bleeding
hearts by promising, if elected, to expand
on Wentworth's policies. Whitlam was swept into
power in 1972 and promptly began spending
hundreds of millions of dollars on Aboriginal
projects.
The Whitlam government fomented and exploited
the feeling of white
guilt over Aboriginal
injustices to spend vast sums of taxpayers'
money on Aboriginal welfare and Aboriginal
paternalism. It was one of the most disastrous
policies of Australia's most disastrous Prime
Minister.
In 1983 Coombs distilled his pipe-dreams into
a co-authored paper entitled
A certain heritage.
It set out in detail how
taxpayers money in the form of handouts and
"sit-down money" would create a separate nation
of hunter-gatherers living in an outback utopia.
This piece of bleeding-heart lunacy just
accelerated the downward spiral of Aboriginal
survival.
A glance at the facts, figures and comments
in the side panels reveals what Wentworth's,
Coombs' and Whitlam's policies have done for
Aboriginal people.
The extent
of the problem
Former ALP Senator Bob Collin's report on
Aboriginal education in the Northern Territory
revealed that, against the background of
encouragement given to Aboriginal languages and
the shocking failure to enforce school
attendance,
some 80 per cent of Aboriginal children are
illiterate.
Levels of domestic violence, child abuse,
sexually transmitted disease, alcoholism and
unemployment that would not be tolerated
elsewhere are entrenched in many Aboriginal
communities.
In 1999 a Queensland domestic violence
taskforce of 50 Aboriginal women concluded, "Increasing
injuries and fatalities as a result of
interpersonal violence has risen to levels which
threaten the continued existence of Australia's
indigenous peoples".
The taskforce report spoke of degrees of
violence and destruction that "cannot be
adequately described";
of murder, rape and child sex abuse in "epidemic
proportions".
Perhaps the most tragic is the plight of
children. Toddlers as young as three are given
petrol-soaked rags to breathe to pacify them
while their mothers go on drinking binges.
Responsibility and accountability
Aboriginals have to stop blaming past
injustices for their egregious behaviour. They
have to accept responsibility for their lives.
Is it racism that makes a man bash his wife to
death in a drunken rage?
If parents cannot accept responsibility for
feeding, caring for and educating their children
then the children must be removed to an
environment where they will be cared for. If the
black aristocracy and the white do-gooders want
to scream "racist" and "stolen generation" then
so be it.
Attitude
Before the majority of Aborigines can join
mainstream Australia they must get rid of their
attitude problem.
Three decades of land-claim, "stolen
generation", dispossession and even genocide
propaganda trumpeted by the black aristocracy,
academics and media have imbued many Aboriginals
with feelings ranging from anger, frustration
and bitterness to a deep hatred of white society
and white people.
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87-year-old widow bashed by
Aboriginal thief |
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The hatred manifests itself in the savage
attacks on white people by Aboriginals. Even the
lowest-of-the-low white mongrels do not bash up
frail elderly women. A significant number of
Aboriginals have no such scruples.
Elsie Hughes (pictured left)
woke from a nap in her home in the Perth suburb
of Lathlain to find a teenage intruder in her
kitchen.
She offered him a cup of tea. In
return, he viciously beat her. The next thing
Elsie Hughes remembers is waking up in Royal
Perth Hospital with two black eyes, a broken
cheekbone and severe bruising to her face and
neck.
The police are seeking to interview the
person pictured left over the vicious bashing of
Elsie Hughes. He is described as an Aborigine,
about 180 cm tall, of medium build with dark,
curly hair. He was wearing a dark jumper.
Assimilation
Land claims, Aboriginal sovereignty and an
Aboriginal treaty are spurious concepts dreamed
up by the Aboriginal aristocracy to
prolong their luxurious lifestyle while drawing
huge taxpayer-funded salaries.
The country's remote Aboriginal settlements
have become, in the words of anthropologist,
Roger Sandall, "broken sociopathic ruins". He
describes the residents as "vocationally
disabled, unpresentable outside the ethnographic
zoos they live in, these tragic people are
Australia's contribution to the new stone age".
More than 70 per cent of Aborigines live in
urban communities and marriages between adult
Aborigines and non-Aborigines has increased to
64 per cent from 46 per cent in 1986.
Most Aboriginal leaders are of mixed descent.
They could equally call themselves Irish,
British or Norwegian, etc. It is somewhat
ludicrous for a person of Irish descent to want
a treaty with the Australian government.
The cultural concentration camps must be
emptied and the residents encouraged to join
mainstream Australia. The payment of "sit-down
money" must be wound back and finally abolished.
The urban Aborigines must throw off their
self-imposed shackles of self-pity, hatred and
resentment and join mainstream Australia.
Education
The key to breaking the cycle of degradation
is education. If 80 per cent of Aboriginal
children are illiterate then governments are
confronted with a massive problem to bring
Aboriginal education up to the level of the rest
of society. Traditional schools cannot
cope.
Governments must set up special remedial
boarding schools for Aboriginal children. Abused
and at-risk children must be removed from their
toxic environments and only allowed to return to
their communities between terms.
With such a poor start, not all of the
children can aspire to a tertiary education but
they must achieve literacy and numeracy skills
of a level to make them employable. Australia
has a growing shortage of skilled tradespeople
and many of the children could take up skilled
trades.
Employment
Intensive work will need to be done with the
children in the special schools to give them the
necessary skills, confidence and motivation to
compete on the job market with the rest of the
population.
In spite of the wildly defamatory statements
of the black aristocracy and the white elites,
Australians are not racist. If they see
Aboriginal kids genuinely trying to improve
themselves, they will offer them jobs and
encouragement.
Summary
Only when Aborigines go through this process
will they enter mainstream Australia and reap
the benefits of steady employment, saving to buy
a house and raising a family.
"The best chances of a good life for
indigenes", says Roger Sandall, "is the same as
for you and me: full fluency and literacy in
English, as much maths as we can handle, and a
job".