paddoboy:
Let me put a few questions to you. You do support and find as absolutely necessary a change of date for Australia day, is that correct?
If that's what most indigenous Australian want (and there are indications that it is), then yes, I support it.
Why do you think your conservative preferences ought to override the preferences of those who have a legitimate complaint regarding the date? White privilege?
So what date suits you? Is this date the choice of all indigenous folk? Is a change of date favourable with us white imported Aussies also?
Lots of dates would suit me just fine, but I don't think it's up to me to decide.
I see that as dishonest by you James, as someone who is obviously educated, would make no misatke about what I have said.
I haven't made a mistake. And why do you respond to a comment about what is happening here and now with references to wrongs done 200 years ago?
I then go on and say that I see any change of date as not really of much consequence and not supported by any great majority of indigenous people.
How great a majority would you require before you'd support changing the date? Would you
ever support a change?
You on the other hand appear to want to envelop this so called political correctness for appearance sake.
You think this is a non-substantive matter of "political correctness gone made", do you? That would be consistent. You're highly resistant to changing your ways, as you have demonstrated in the in regard to sexist attitudes.
Governments never move as quick as you or I could wish for James, and more often then not, things are done to improve and eliminate injustices that many of us never hear about anyway. The indigenous injustices have been constantly improved over many successive Labor governements from the time of Gough through to Hawke, Keating, Rudd and Gillard, including the parlimentary apology.
Some symbolic gestures have been made, certainly, usually after lengthy periods of resistance and government intransigence. While those are important, they do little to address the practical disadvantages that indigenous Australians suffer on a daily basis.
What do you suggest James?
I've already told you what I suggest.
Remembering no one has said anything about keeping quiet. Are you promoting a revolution? riots? what?
I'm promoting the idea that indigenous views should be given fair consideration and not dismissed with a wave of the (white) hand because the "white majority" is too complacent or actively resistant to respond to reasonable requests.
It is the position of a sizable majority, including that of indigenous folk.
No. Only marginally over half of the voting population voted for our current conservative government, for instance.
While certainly we do have a preponderance of right wing governments at this time, people are standing up to be counted and that includes the current situation in the US. But tell us James, what do you suggest?
First and foremost, I suggest that people ought to inform themselves about the political world they live in. Conservative populists like Trump get voted into office because they are able to pull the wool over the eyes of uneducated, uninformed voters, who can thereby be convinced to vote against not only the best interests of their country, but against their own best interests (economic, social, health, you name it).
Never been polled James and know no one who has in actual fact. And of course polls are in many cases wrong. You remember what the polls were telling us before our last Federal election?
Different polls said different things. Most of them correctly predicted the election outcome within their margin of error. Polls are not "in many cases wrong", unless they use a biased sample or are constructed so that they build in a bias, either intentionally or unintentionally.
People can't be wrong about their expressed opinions. They can always lie to the pollsters, if they want to, but when they say they believe something or intend something (e.g. intending to vote for one party or another) usually they have no particular motive to lie in an anonymous poll.
Anyway James, this thread was started by me to celebrate and pass on knowledge to others that it was Australia Day on the 26th Jan.
What are you celebrating? Governor Philip's landing at Botany Bay in 1788? Or something else? If it's not the landing of the First Fleet, then why is the date important?