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28 April 2005
    News
200 years of devastation
Issue 81
Thursday, 28 April 2005
One day in the dreamtime my spirit was sitting on the beach dreaming about his family who lives in the desert.
He was thinking how easy it was to get food at the tribe that he was married into and the strange things he came across, like when the old men took him hunting for food and one of the eldest pulled this thing from the water.
It was slimy, had big eyes and spiky things along its back. This one they call fish.
And then we walked along a bit further and we caught another spiky thing but this one was on land.  This one they call porcupine.
And the big Blue Mountains and green pastures where I had to walk for more food for my tribe.
And suddenly I was awoken by this strange thing that looked like a canoe to me with long sticks and sheets on top of them and iron things coming out of the side of them.
And then little canoes came into the beach with ghosts on it so then I ran into the bushes to watch them.
One of the ghosts put a stick into the ground with a scarf on top of it.
They then started to clap and laugh and seemed happy.
Issue 81        
One of the ghosts kept pulling half of his head off so I ran back to the leader of my tribe and told Mudabiggadi.
Mudabiggadi then went down to the ghosts and said not to come down to our sacred sites and not to build houses on our land.
Then a couple of weeks later they started to build houses on our sacred sites.
Mudabiggadi then went down to the boss of them and speared them.
And they shot Mudabiggadi with a stick that had a rock coming out of it.
I watched from the edge of the cliff while my tribe went down.
My tribe went down, they then made the old men and women walk off the edge of the cliff.
They then buried the children in the ground and they rode on their horses and chopped off their heads.
And who was left they made them build iron bars and brick walls and locked them up to be used as slaves.
So I ran back to my mother’s tribe.
And then I told my mother what had happened to my people.  She said go and tell every other tribe in Australia.
So I did it but they would not believe me.  They then said, where are your elders?
I said they’re home, waiting for the ghosts to come.
But they did not believe me so I ran back to my mother’s tribe to wait for the ghosts to come.
We waited with nulla nullas, spears and stone axes.
And the ghosts came a couple of days later.
They shot me with a little rock and my spirit rose above the pack of them.
I watched my people fight a great fight, but they did not win and now I am back in the 90’s.  How things changed.
They stole our land, our culture and our minerals.  But one things that didn’t change — they still got the iron bars and the brick walls and now I sit with four walls that surround me.
Ernest Smith
Lightning Ridge, NSW


 


 Issue 82

Opinion
Tough love in the wild, wild west
Issue 82
The little town of Onslow in the boondocks of Western Australia sleeps soundly tonight.  A no-nonsense policy initiative on the part of the state-government has combined with the vigilance of local authorities to ensure that a menace to the community is safely behind bars.
The Weekend Australian of Saturday June 4, 2005 reports that a 15-year-old Aboriginal boy had been in custody for 12 days after being sent more than 1,500 kilometres from his home in the state’s remote north-west for attempting to steal a two-dollar ice cream.
‘Joshua’ was caught red-handed in the commission of his treacherous crime.  In a meticulously planned heist, the perpetrator stuffed a cold Hazelnut Roll down the back of his shorts — only to be nicked by a staff member.
The local copper’s wife, no less.
True to type, Joshua initially denied the theft — but the criminal mastermind eventually made a full confession.
They don’t muck around in Onslow.  The prisoner was refused bail by police and driven 300 kilometres to the lock up at Karratha, where he was remanded in custody by two justices of the peace.
Quite right too.  Hardened to the delights of the Hazelnut Roll, and dazzled by the bright lights of the big smoke, Joshua would undoubtedly have gone looking for bigger kicks.
A supermarket fridge full of Pine-Lime Splices, Golden Gaytimes and Choc-top Drumsticks would have presented an irresistible temptation to his anti-social young mind.
Hearty congratulations then to the bureaucrats who ensured that the wheels of justice — magnificent in their impartiality — ground on.
Lesser folk might have thought it ridiculous to spend $10,000 on escorting the ‘ice-cream bandit’ 1,500 kilometres to Perth.  But it’s clear that those involved realised that higher principles were at stake, and steadfastly refused to compromise the operation of the state’s justice system.
I feel sure that solid citizens across the globe will be impressed by the resolution of the West Australian government in this matter.
Tourist Bureau souvenir
I hope that the state’s Tourist Bureau will claim credit where it’s due, attracting international tourists to a location where they can be relaxed and comfortable, secure in the knowledge that the government is not ‘soft on crime’.
Imagine: Come to Western Australia.
Experience the magnificence of the bungle-bungles, see the spectacular wildflowers of the south-west, and taste the internationally acclaimed wines of Margaret River.
Visit the detention centre where the state held a 15-year-old Aboriginal boy in custody for twelve days because he stole an ice-cream.
Pick up a souvenir from the full range of merchandise that is available.
Check out the prison-mugs stamped with the ‘Joshua’s Jail’ logo (copyright WA Inc.)
You don’t have to be black to do time in WA — but it helps!
Choose from a selection of T-shirts with zany slogans like ‘You don’t have to be black to do time in WA — but it helps!’
Perhaps the more cerebral tourists could be presented with a copy of the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody.
You know, the one that stressed that incarceration of Indigenous Australians should only ever be a measure of last resort.
But this wasn’t Joshua’s first offence — he has ‘priors’.
The report didn’t go into detail — but considering the offender’s modus operandi — I’d guess we are talking about multiple counts of riding skateboards in a forbidden area, putting feet on bus-seats and other similar outrages.
Naturally we were treated to the spectacle of a do-gooder from the Aboriginal Legal Service bleating about alleged racial discrimination.
38 times more likely to be incarcerated
Let’s look at the facts:  Aboriginal kids are 38 times more likely to be incarcerated than non-Aboriginal kids, so they must be bad mustn’t they?
You don’t get locked up for doing nothing.
While these matters may appear trivial, anyone who knows anything about the criminal mind will tell you that it’s all about escalation.  One day it’s Hazelnut Rolls, the next, murder, drug-dealing and international terrorism.  This sort of stuff has to be nipped in the bud.
So I reckon 12 days porridge for a Hazelnut Roll is about right.
A family block of chocolate should be worth about a month in the nick, and purloining a two-litre bottle of Coke should earn the offender six months in the slammer.
Barbarians
You’ve got to have the rule of law — otherwise we revert to being barbarians.
Graham Ring is based in Melbourne.   He's a part-time, award-winning writer and a fortnightly NIT columnist.
 
In his latest column for the New Statesman, John Pilger, returning to his homeland, finds the reaction to the death of Australia's richest man, Kerry Packer, providing a glimpse behind the facade of what author Donald Horne labelled 'the lucky country'.
Pilger :19 Jan 2006
AUSTRALIA: A FIRST-RATE COUNTRY RUN BY SECOND-RATE PEOPLE
Shortly after Christmas, the Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer died in his mansion overlooking Sydney Harbour, guarded by large, salivating dogs.   In Britain, he was remembered as the man who brought hoopla and money to cricket.   Here, in Australia, his death provided a glimpse of the changes imposed on societies that once were proud to call themselves social democracies.
Lauded as "Australia's richest man" who "achieved" a rating on Forbes magazine's rich list, as if this put him alongside Donald Bradman and the Sydney Opera House, Packer excited a fear and sycophancy not normally associated with Australians.
"Laid to rest in his beloved sunburnt country", said the obsequious banner headline across the front page of the Sydney Morning Herald.
The Sydney Sun-Herald topped this with: "Packer's practical compassion a model for us all".
Legally avoided paying many millions of dollars in tax
Packer was a hulk of man who lost his temper a lot, said "fuck" a lot, gambled and lost huge amounts, admired Genghis Khan (no irony) and ruled by the sheer power of his inherited money, much of it accumulated by having legally avoided paying many millions of dollars in tax — the fail-safe method employed by his principal competitor, Rupert Murdoch.
In the mid-19th century the Australian press was one of the liveliest and bravest in the world; today, dominated by the marketing empires of Murdoch, Packer and Fairfax, it is little more than a voice of Australia's political elite and of Bush's Washington.
Not surprisingly, the government of John Howard is to give Packer a state memorial service.   "Kerry," said the prime minister, "was larger than life."
It was Howard who, stricken with pneumonia, famously got out of bed to entertain "Rupert" at his home.   It was Howard who embraced the mantle bestowed by a Packer magazine that he was George W Bush?s "deputy sheriff".   (When asked about this, Bush immediately promoted him to "sheriff for south-east Asia".)
"The land of fair go"
The fear and sycophancy that Howard and his Antipodean neoconservatives have promoted since coming to power almost a decade ago have put paid to Australia's tenuous self-regard as "the land of fair go".   (The much-abused term "lucky country" was ironic, coined by the author, the late Donald Horne to denote a first-rate country run by second-rate people.)
Like Bush's America, Howard's Australia is not so much a democracy as a plutocracy, governed for and by the "big end of town", even though, as Mark Twain pointed out, this is "an entire continent peopled by the lower orders".
He was not that far out; for my generation, like that of my parents, we were the poor who had got away.
There was a sense that we had inherited something other than the British legacy.
Long before the rest of the western world, Australians gained a minimum wage, an eight-hour working day, pensions, maternity allowance, child benefits and the vote for women.
The secret ballot was invented here and became known as the "Australian ballot".
The Australian Labor Party formed governments 25 years before any comparable social democracy in Europe.
In the 1960s, with the exception of the Aboriginal people — who are always the exception — Australians could boast the most equitable spread of personal income in the world.
Barely a memory
It is a proud history that is barely a memory in Howard's Australia.
His is an undeclared union with the "opposition" Labour Party, which under his predecessors Bob Hawke and Paul Keating launched a spectacular redistribution of wealth in favour of the rich.
According to the financial analysts County Securities Australia, the deregulation of the television industry alone gave Packer and Murdoch "a one billion-dollar gift entirely free of tax".
The convicted crook Alan Bond built a paper empire that owed 14 billion Australian dollars, or 10 per cent of the national debt. "Bondy", said Hawke, was also "larger than life".
Police-state impulses
Howard takes his legislative lead from Blair and Bush, whose police-state impulses were recently made into law here.
The few members of parliament who tried to debate this were silenced, incredibly, by the Speaker.
The result is that Australians who seriously question Howard's role in Iraq risk prosecution under a law of sedition: penalty seven years.
This was followed by a bill that guts trade union rights.
In the United Nations, which Australia helped found, Australia has stood against almost all of humanity on global warming and the rule of international law in Palestine.
Aboriginal institutions and programmes destroyed or emasculated
The recent race riots in Sydney were all but licensed by a government whose racism has seen asylum-seekers go to their deaths in leaking boats, or kept in harsh, remote camps.
Aboriginal institutions and programmes have been destroyed or emasculated and land-rights claims tied down by laws that invite endless litigation.
Most young black Australians can look forward to prison.
Behind the glamour of Australian sport, black footballers — including whole teams — are often dead before the age of 40.
Australia is the only developed country on a United Nations "shame list" of countries where trachoma, an entirely preventable disease that causes blindness, is tolerated among its indigenous people.
Using acolytes in the press, the government has attacked institutions, such as the National Museum, and historians who dare to remind Australians of their true past and present.
Donald Horne's "lucky country" was spot on.
First published inthe New Statesman — www.newstatesman.co.uk
Published on Monday, July 4, 2005 by CommonDreams.org
by Sheldon Drobny
Justice O'Connor's decision in Bush v. Gore led to the current Bush administration's execution of war crimes and atrocities in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other places in the Middle East that are as egregious as those committed by the Third Reich and other evil governments in human history.
US destroyed Fallujah as it tries to destroy the rest of Iraq
The lesson is clear.
Those people who may be honorable and distinguished in their chosen profession should always make decisions based upon good rather than evil no matter where their nominal allegiances may rest.
Justice O'Connor was quoted to have said something to the affect that she abhorred the thought of Bush losing the 2000 election to Gore.
She was known to have wanted to retire after the 2000 election for same reason she is now retiring.
She wanted to spend more time with her sick husband.
Unfortunately, she tarnished her distinguished career with the deciding vote in Bush v. Gore by going along with the partisan majority of the Court to interfere with a democratic election that she and the majority feared would be lost in an honest recount.
She dishonored herself and the Supreme Court by succumbing to party allegiances and not The Constitution to which she swore to uphold.
And the constitutional argument she and the majority used to justify their decision was the Equal Protection Clause.
The Equal Protection Clause was the ultimate basis for the decision, but the majority essentially admitted (what was obvious in any event) that it was not basing its conclusion on any general view of what equal protection requires.
The decision in Bush v Gore was not dictated by the law in any sense—either the law found through research, or the law as reflected in the kind of intuitive sense that comes from immersion in the legal culture.
The Equal Protection clause is generally used in matters concerning civil rights.
The majority ignored their basic conservative views supporting federalism and states' rights in order to justify their decision.
History will haunt these justices down for their utter lack of justice and the hypocrisy associated with this decision.
Sheldon Drobny is Co-founder of Air America Radio.
Unspeakable grief and horror
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                        ...and the circus of deception killing continues...
Most recent 'Circus of Killing' click here
He says, "You are quite mad, Kewe"
And of course I am.
Why, I don't believe any of it — not the bloody body, not the bloody mind, not even the bloody Universe, or is it bloody multiverse.
"It's all illusion," I say.   "Don't you know, my lad, my lassie.   The game!   The game, me girl, me boy!   Takes on interest, don't you know.   T'is me sport, till doest find a better!"
Pssssst — but all this stuff is happening down here
Let's change it!
Mother her two babies killed by US
More than Fifteen million
US dollars given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use
4 billion US dollars per year
Nanci Pelosi — U.S. House Democratic leader — Congresswoman California, 8th District
Speaking at the AIPAC agenda   May 26, 2005
There are those who contend that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is all about Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.   This is absolute nonsense.
In truth, the history of the conflict is not over occupation, and never has been:  it is over the fundamental right of Israel to exist.
The greatest threat to Israel's right to exist, with the prospect of devastating violence, now comes from Iran.
For too long, leaders of both political parties in the United States have not done nearly enough to confront the Russians and the Chinese, who have supplied Iran as it has plowed ahead with its nuclear and missile technology....
In the words of Isaiah, we will make ourselves to Israel 'as hiding places from the winds and shelters from the tempests; as rivers of water in dry places; as shadows of a great rock in a weary land.'
Pelosi
 
 

 
 
 
For archive purposes, this article is being stored on TheWE.biz website.
The purpose is to advance understandings of environmental, political,
human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues.