br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
RememberUsAlways, to MIguns
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

"The still allows racial – not just against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples but against anyone. This is made possible by Section 51 (xxvi) in that the government may make laws with respect to 'people of any race'."
-Google








https://humanrights.gov.au

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

Indigenous peoples can't be collateral damage in the push for a green future

https://www.crikey.com.au/2024/05/02/indigenous-peoples-renewable-energy-mining/

aby, to random
@aby@aus.social avatar

I love this time of year. My neighbours start using their fireplace, and the smell reminds me of visiting my Nanny and Poppy's farm when I was a kid. It was pmuch the only time I felt safe growing up.

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

Like many Aboriginal kids we've lost too soon, this child was loved by his family, not by the state

https://www.crikey.com.au/2024/04/24/aboriginal-suicide-10-year-old-child-protection-stolen-generation/

RememberUsAlways, to MIguns
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

"The still allows racial – not just against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples but against anyone. This is made possible by Section 51 (xxvi) in that the government may make laws with respect to 'people of any race'."
-Google








https://humanrights.gov.au

aby, to random
@aby@aus.social avatar

Colonialism has mastered the crime of stealing our children for generations and then punishing and criticizing our parents and grandparents for how they originally raised children.

Then, they went ahead and stole, renamed & rebranded our sacred original parenting instructions as “attachment” parenting, “conscious” parenting, “gentle” parenting, “positive” parenting, and “child led” parenting.

It has been used as a tool of profit.

It has been used as a means of stealing babies from families, then forcing the mothers and fathers of those babies to take colonial based parenting courses in order to get their babies back. And those colonial based parenting courses are heavily twisted and skewed versions of our parenting instructions - but twisted and skewed so severely, so deeply, that they only accommodate and feed colonial agendas and systems.

It is a matter of indigenous parents today abiding to colonially twisted, and colonially backwards parenting “styles” in order to fit the criteria of being a “good parent.”

Here’s the thing though.

Residential schools, the 60’s scoop, the child welfare system, and every other colonial policy embedded in the colonial fabric of society was created to do just this.

Keep the children out of our families to continue the ongoing attempts of assimilation and genocide against our peoples.

Even today.

So rather than pushing for “attachment” parenting, “conscious” parenting, “gentle” parenting, “positive” parenting, and “child led” parenting let us open into, revitalize, maintain and relearn the original instructions of raising and nurturing children.

Let us heal and dissolve what generations of colonialism has embedded into our parenting styles.

May we do our best to continue that.

So we can continue to raise children in the ways that we were originally meant to….

For generations to come.

Because this is the least we can do for the children in our lives today.

-- Andrea Landry, 2022

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

'Too many Aboriginal babies': Australia's secret history of Aboriginal population control in the 1960s

https://www.crikey.com.au/2024/04/12/australia-aboriginal-population-birth-control-stolen-generations/

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar

Great Barrier Reef discovery overturns belief Aboriginal Australians did not make pottery, archaeologists say

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2024/apr/10/great-barrier-reef-discovery-overturns-belief-aboriginal-australians-did-not-make-pottery

itwasntme, to auspol
@itwasntme@mstdn.social avatar

US - Gun deaths
Australia - Poker Machine deaths
Madness

RememberUsAlways,
@RememberUsAlways@newsie.social avatar

@itwasntme

"The Constitution still allows racial discrimination – not just against Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples but against anyone. This is made possible by Section 51 (xxvi) in that the government may make laws with respect to 'people of any race'."
-Google






https://humanrights.gov.au

mattotcha, to Archaeology
@mattotcha@mastodon.social avatar
GregCocks, to Futurology
@GregCocks@techhub.social avatar
aby, to academia
@aby@aus.social avatar

My lecturer: nobody here is saying that police are bad and that we don't need them.

Me: raises hand
hi, I know we haven't met yet, but I'd like to introduce myself and the fact that I'm saying exactly that.

msquebanh, (edited ) to Canada
@msquebanh@mastodon.sdf.org avatar

is providing $2.1 million in funding for three different programs at that will help adults and youth navigate 's system.

The government has been working for almost a decade to address and within the justice system and the numbers remain alarming.

https://toronto.citynews.ca/2024/03/12/justice-department-announces-new-funding-for-aboriginal-legal-services-after-shocking-incarceration-stats

aby, to auspol
@aby@aus.social avatar

Its $6.75 a week.

Don't let the headline trick you. This isn't going to do anything.

*Over the twelve months to the December 2023 quarter, all Living Cost Indexes rose between 4.0% and 6.9%.

https://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/millions-of-australians-set-to-get-boost-in-welfare-payments/ykuormzun?cid=newsapp:socialshare:other

  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2023, December). Selected Living Cost Indexes, Australia. ABS.
EndemicEarthling, to Israel
@EndemicEarthling@todon.eu avatar

Every single week for the last 21 weeks upon land, there have been thousands upon thousands (sometimes easily tens of thousands) of people gathering in support of a in and calling upon the Australian government to stop supporting in its .

Every Sunday in Hyde Park at 1.30pm,* we've listened to speakers, speakers, speakers, politicians of various stripes (though neither of the major parties, of course, as they both remain complicit in support of the government responsible for most of the slaughter), elders who lived through the , teenagers organising , community leaders, poets, faith leaders and more, with perhaps 75% of the speakers being women, and almost all being people of colour (most of the exceptions being MPs).

*Except when has dictated otherwise, giving priority to (much smaller and only) occasional pro-Israel rallies and forcing a shift to Saturday a couple of times, under threat of .

Then we've marched (or rolled) with flags, banners, signs, drums and (loud!) voices: Arab, Aboriginal, African, Anglo, Asian and more; from those too old to walk (in wheelchairs) to those too young to walk (in strollers).


1/6

br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
Heliograph, to australia
@Heliograph@mastodon.au avatar

TIL "Australian-Aboriginal man David Unaipon is known for his contributions to science and the people. His inventions include a tool for sheep-shearing, a centrifugal motor, a multi-radial wheel and mechanical propulsion device. appears on 's $50 note." :akko_fistup:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Australian_inventions

DoomsdaysCW, to NativeAmerican
@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social avatar

Opinion: Why the birthplace of the Western religion shouldn’t be destroyed by a

by Luke Goodrich
February 6, 2024·

"A federal court is poised to decide whether a site will be destroyed by a massive . Mining proponents claim that destroying the is necessary for the development of . That claim is both factually wrong and morally repugnant. And recent polling shows that the vast majority of Americans agree with what the constitution requires: sacred sites deserve the same protection as all other houses of worship.

"Since before European contact, and other Native tribes have lived and honored their at , or 'Chi’chil Bildagoteel.' The site is the birthplace of Western Apache religion and the site of ancient religious ceremonies that cannot take place anywhere else. Because of its religious and cultural significance, Oak Flat is on the National Register of Historic Places and has been protected from mining and other destructive practices for decades.

"That changed in 2014, when several members of Congress, supported by , slipped an amendment into a must-pass defense bill authorizing the transfer of Oak Flat to a foreign-owned mining giant. That company, , announced plans to obliterate the sacred ground by swallowing it in a mining crater nearly two miles wide and 1,100-feet deep, ending Apache religious practices forever. That was no surprise given the company’s sordid history dealing with . The majority owner of Resolution Copper is (the world’s second largest mining company), which sparked international outrage in 2020 when it destroyed a 46,000-year-old rock shelter with some of the most significant artifacts in all of .

"The Apache and their allies, represented by my firm, the , have been fighting in court to ensure that such an atrocity won’t repeat itself at Oak Flat. After initial court rulings against the Apache, a full panel of 11 judges at the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals reheard their appeal last spring. A decision on whether the government can execute the land transfer is expected any day.

"Resolution Copper and its backers want the public to believe that building the mine is essential for developing energy. Extracting the copper beneath Oak Flat, they say, will help to build batteries necessary for powering and thus fight . In other words, we have to destroy Oak Flat in order to save the planet.

"These claims, however, are false — and they are specifically designed to obscure the physical and cultural destruction the project would wreak on the land.

"The mine will destroy the , not save it. It is undisputed that the mine will swallow the ecologically diverse landscape of Oak Flat in a massive crater, decimating the local . It will also leave behind approximately 1.37 billion tons of ',' or , which, according to the government’s own environmental assessment, will pollute the and scar the landscape permanently. And the mine will consume vast quantities of water at the time it is most needed by drought-stricken towns and .

"Supporters of the mine are also at odds with the majority of Americans. According to this year’s Religious Freedom Index, an annual survey conducted by Becket, 74% of Americans believe that Native sacred sites on federal land should be protected from mining projects, even when the projects are purportedly pro-jobs and pro-environment.

"That conclusion is both sensible and humane. America can transition to renewable energy without blasting the cradle of Western Apache religion into oblivion. And it should. For too long, our nation has made excuses for taking advantage of and their land. Indeed, our nation drove the Western Apache off Oak Flat and surrounding lands in the 1800s precisely to make way for . It shouldn’t repeat that again.

"It is past time to protect Indigenous sacred sites from further destruction. Basic fairness and our constitutional commitment to religious freedom require no less. And, happily, most Americans agree."

https://news.yahoo.com/opinion-why-birthplace-western-apache-200000087.html

largess,
@largess@mastodon.au avatar

@DoomsdaysCW
>The majority owner of Resolution Copper is (the world’s second largest mining company), which sparked international outrage in 2020 when it destroyed a 46,000-year-old rock shelter with some of the most significant artifacts in all of .


Just as a update here, a whole buch of new legislation was implemented when this happened ..and then the legislation was mostly shit canned becase the exploitation must continue.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-02-12/shire-charged-in-first-test-of-wa-cultural-heritage-laws/103455600

>But the state government scrapped the new legislation just five weeks after it was implemented amid widespread backlash about the complexity and effectiveness of the laws

DoomsdaysCW, to australia
@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social avatar

When destroyed ancient caves at , the world got an unsightly glimpse of 's outdated cultural heritage laws.

Here's everything you need to know about the WA government's backdown on its Cultural Heritage laws

By Jake Sturmer
Posted Tue 8 Aug 2023

"The WA government's 2021 changes were supposed to prevent what it described as a 'global embarrassment' from ever happening again.

"Instead, the Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Act has left many farmers confused and traditional owners frustrated.

"After just five weeks in operation, the government has backflipped — trying to stem the political bleeding that is tainting WA's new premier and now muddying the waters of the Voice referendum debate.

So what's changing?

"It's important to remember that any activities that could damage Aboriginal cultural heritage still need approval.

"The old-but-soon-to-be-new 1972 act meant the minister had to tick off on every action no matter how minor — known as a Section 18 approval.
WA premier announces repeal of Aboriginal Cultural Heritage laws

"Just five weeks after being legislated, Roger Cook announces the WA government will be scrapping its .

"The 2021 act created a system of tiers and approvals.

"Want to build a fence with no clearing? No approval required.

"New site with deep excavation? You'll need a management plan that has to be ticked off by a local Aboriginal organisation at your expense.

"But the government acknowledged these tiers have caused massive confusion and will therefore be scrapped.

"There were reports the rules would have prevented everything from gardening to installing a swimming pool, building a garage or burying a pet in the backyard.

"In fact, such activities were exempt, as were all properties smaller than 1,100 square metres.

"So it's no surprise the biggest outcry came from farmers.

How will another Juukan Gorge be prevented?

"When landowners requested to damage or destroy heritage sites, they needed one of those approvals from the minister.

"If the minister rejected that, developers had a right to appeal but traditional owners did not.

"As part of the government's backflip, it will amend the laws to give a right of appeal to the native title party whose cultural heritage is impacted.

"Developers will also have to bring any new heritage information to the government's attention."

Read more:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-08-09/wa-aboriginal-cultural-heritage-laws-backdown-explained/102704110



aby, to random
@aby@aus.social avatar
br00t4c, to community
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
br00t4c, to random
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
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