Indigenous Voice to Parliament

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stui magpie
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Post by stui magpie »

^

Thanks Nomad, I CBF bothering to write detailed rejections of his statements because I know that will just end up in a debate which can't be won. His ideological bent is such that whatever facts I could throw up would be rejected or warped.

On a side note, I notice that most of the people who had Vote Yes signs in their front yards haven't taken them down. They're still up, as is the 1 No sign I've seen which happens to be up in Toc.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by David »

"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
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Post by pietillidie »

^It might be that he means 'monumental' in the sense that the polity can't cope with even the simplest, smallest policy change, so politically it's a 'monumental task'.

I stand by my view that Australia has virtually solved no problem of consequence or complexity in my lifetime. Doing so is beyond the electorate, which can at best muster up motivation to kick something or someone in a brief flurry of rage.

There's no way, for instance, that Biden's Inflation Reduction Act, his best policy by miles, gets passed in Australia. The best Australia could do is find energy to rail against an Inflation Reduction Act. It would spawn three fringe counter parties in response and cries of an Illuminati takeover. That's the level of suburban dim that envelopes you.

I don't think you guys realise how tiny-minded Australian political ambitions are. Nothing can ever be done except in rage or panic.
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Post by Magpietothemax »

nomadjack wrote:

I'll have a crack. how do you reconcile the claim below about what motivated 'volunteers' to fight to abolish slavery with the complete bunk you write about us all being completely snowed by the interests and narrative of contemporary capitalism? Talk about selective false consciousness...:lol: You can't have it both ways.


Well at least you had a crack.
Where did I say that we are "all snowed by the interests and narratives of contemporary capitalism", I have never said anything of the sort, and do not think this at all. I wouldn't bother commenting, as I do, on numerous social media sources if I did not think that there are plenty out there who are receptive to understanding the truth about contemporary capitalism and rejecting all its lies and violence.
Historical accounts show that there were thousands and thousands of volunteers for the Union army who fought to abolish slavery. The fact that they did then explains why now it is so important to expose the truth about contemporary society, because there will be plenty who decide that they will undertake a struggle, no doubt involving significant self-sacrifice, in order to oppose injustice.
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Post by stui magpie »

^

and I'm sure the cash those volunteers received had nothing to do with it.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by Magpietothemax »

stui magpie wrote:^

and I'm sure the cash those volunteers received had nothing to do with it.
No. Such a superficial and cynical explanation is rejected completely by the most dedicated historians of the US civil war:
"Motivated by duty and honor, and often by religious faith, these men wrote frequently of their firm belief in the cause for which they fought: the principles of liberty, freedom, justice, and patriotism.” *
(James McPherson:"For Cause and Comrades")
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Post by pietillidie »

Alright, I was too harsh further above. Maybe I still have bad memories of a few things such as climate change denial, and looking back I might have felt generally stifled by Australia's reflexive conservatism.

The advantage is that Australia avoids American-level extremes. The disadvantage is that it reacts too late to science, technology and risk signals.

By personality I'm likely to move fairly quickly on a plan if I'm convinced of the risk assessment or think a shift has merits generally. I'm also happy to trial things if they're stuck at an obvious impasse (so the Voice and Israel-Palestine).

Global warming probably left me most frustrated. I was comfortable with the risk assessment, but felt even if one wasn't compelled by the science, a move away from fossil fuels was reasonable anyway on the basis of energy security, sectoral balance, new industry advantage, pollution reduction, etc.

All those things are clear now, while the melt rate is accelerating at the top end of or even beyond predictions that were once deemed alarmist (once you trigger these processes they unlock faster than anticipated, develop their own feedback loops, etc., and scientists could rightly smell this a mile off). So, the naysayers couldn't have been more wrong if they tried.

Israel-Palestine is similarly frustrating. Decades ago my conclusion was that a neutral security arrangement, such as peacekeepers, was needed to bring credibility and transparency to the situation. And yet, here we are again with another Natenyahu failure. Much like the Voice, Israel-Palestine is one of those cases where you have to take a different tack even if just for the learning.

I already assume Hamas will be scumbags, while I expect average Mo Palestinians to naturally have less choice by virtue of poverty and the historical situation. But Israel has choices, one of them being not to vote for Netanyahu and not to repeat the same process ad infinitum by taking the low ground, breeding a new generation of terrorists, off-siding the planet, and sending the bill to the global economy.

Today I was reminded by a news article of those who claimed Brexit would halt illegal arrivals to the UK, when in fact it increased them. That's because illegal immigration, much like the Israel-Palestine conflict, is a pan-regional problem clearly bigger than any one party or side that requires large-scale buy-in and coordination. (Not to mention the UK already had great leeway of policy in that regard even in the EU, so was likely to flounder now as then if the mindset didn't change).

With all such major challenges, wishing the hard but serious solution away merely delays the inevitable. It's just so frustrating watching things on repeat as the costs and risks grow.
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Post by nomadjack »

Magpietothemax wrote:
nomadjack wrote:

I'll have a crack. how do you reconcile the claim below about what motivated 'volunteers' to fight to abolish slavery with the complete bunk you write about us all being completely snowed by the interests and narrative of contemporary capitalism? Talk about selective false consciousness...:lol: You can't have it both ways.


Well at least you had a crack.
Where did I say that we are "all snowed by the interests and narratives of contemporary capitalism", I have never said anything of the sort, and do not think this at all. I wouldn't bother commenting, as I do, on numerous social media sources if I did not think that there are plenty out there who are receptive to understanding the truth about contemporary capitalism and rejecting all its lies and violence.
Historical accounts show that there were thousands and thousands of volunteers for the Union army who fought to abolish slavery. The fact that they did then explains why now it is so important to expose the truth about contemporary society, because there will be plenty who decide that they will undertake a struggle, no doubt involving significant self-sacrifice, in order to oppose injustice.
Isn't this implicit in your whole argument and in the posturing and cookie cutter arguments put forward by fringe groups like Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance? Ordinary voters didn't support the Voice because of the hit job done by the major parties in the interests of big capital. Ordinary voters continue to support parties that have done sfa to address climate change because of the same vested interests. Ordinary voters continue to support a market economy because the major parties and mainstream media are so effective at hiding or rationalising the inequality inherent in capitalist productive systems. There is an element of truth in much of what you say, but you sell ordinary voters short. Ordinary voters (most at least) reject extremism and populism - both left and right. And they do this because they want practical solutions and smell bullshit dressed up as pseudo-intellectual arguments based around a kernel of truth. You want to expose the 'truth' but the 'truth' you put forward is a caricature without any nuance or balance. The world is mostly grey not black or white.
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Post by stui magpie »

The world is mostly grey not black or white
Very very true yet a surprising number of people don't realise it.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Post by slangman »

I love the Black & White world ⚫️⚪️⚫️
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Post by Jezza »

They've stopped counting, so I assume these are the final results:

The turnout nationally was around 90%.

National:
[*] YES = 6,286,894 (39.9%)
[*] NO = 9,452,792 (60.1%)[/b]


NSW:
[*] YES = 2,058,764 (41.0%)
[*] NO = 2,957,880 (59.0%)[/b]

VIC:
[*] YES = 1,846,623 (45.9%)
[*] NO = 2,180,851 (54.1%)[/b]

QLD:
[*] YES = 1,010,416 (31.8%)
[*] NO = 2,167,957 (68.2%)[/b]

WA:
[*] YES = 582,077 (36.7%)
[*] NO = 1,002,740 (63.3%)[/b]

SA:
[*] YES = 417,745 (35.8%)
[*] NO = 748,318 (64.2%)[/b]

TAS:
[*] YES = 152,271 (41.1%)
[*] NO = 218,425 (58.9%)[/b]

https://tallyroom.aec.gov.au/Referendum ... -29581.htm
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Post by eddiesmith »

When the campaign started, Victoria and NSW were in the bag as Yes states and they focused their attention on SA and Tassie to get the 4 states as QLD was always a no and the WA state government had ensured WA was a hard no.

Yet in the end they got smashed in NSW and a landslide loss in Victoria whilst not even getting close in SA or Tassie.
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Post by Kingsofclutch »

Magpietothemax wrote: No. Such a superficial and cynical explanation is rejected completely by the most dedicated historians of the US civil war:
"Motivated by duty and honor, and often by religious faith, these men wrote frequently of their firm belief in the cause for which they fought: the principles of liberty, freedom, justice, and patriotism.” *
(James McPherson:"For Cause and Comrades")
Ahhh yes the buzz words of the rich, elite and those definitely not in the trenches, slaughter your youth for the prize, leave them for dead when they come home, keep waving that freedom flag in case anyone notices how much money you made.
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Post by Magpietothemax »

Kingsofclutch wrote:
Magpietothemax wrote: No. Such a superficial and cynical explanation is rejected completely by the most dedicated historians of the US civil war:
"Motivated by duty and honor, and often by religious faith, these men wrote frequently of their firm belief in the cause for which they fought: the principles of liberty, freedom, justice, and patriotism.” *
(James McPherson:"For Cause and Comrades")
Ahhh yes the buzz words of the rich, elite and those definitely not in the trenches, slaughter your youth for the prize, leave them for dead when they come home, keep waving that freedom flag in case anyone notices how much money you made.
Not sure what point you are making, but I think you have missed the point somewhat, since the concepts of liberty, freedom, justice and patriotism (belief in a new republic and the abolition of slavery) had a totally diffferent meaning in the 1860's during the US Civil War to what they did at the start of the First World War, by which stage the concepts of patriotism, justice and liberty were utilised by capitalist governments to send men to war as cannon fodder for the profits of the super rich. In history and politics, concepts evolve in time. What means one thing in one historical epoch means something else in another.
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