Australia’s Big End of Town gambled heavily in the Voice referendum - and lost.
Only the Nanny “State” (Canberra) voted “Yes”. But their horse ran last in every other state and territory and now has to be put down.
This costly ($400M) and divisive exercise showed that Australians do not want politicians meddling with their federal constitution. We have learned to distrust proposals supported by big government, big business, trade unions, woke celebrities and the ABC. And the more we heard of this racist proposal, the less we liked it.
Heads should roll, salaries of
responsible ministers should be capped and bonuses and pay rises for chief
executives and board members should be scrapped for all companies that tried to
interfere in the political process. Class actions may be launched.
Heading the “guilty and incompetent”
list is QANTAS who even painted “YES” slogans on their aeroplanes promoting a
political cause opposed by 60% of Australians. The whole QANTAS board should go
(with no free stress counselling).
They were not alone – The Business
Council, BHP, Rio, Wesfarmers, Telstra, the big banks, celebrities, sporting
bodies and of course “Their ABC” joined the cacophony of unwelcome voices
trying to divide Australia by race. It is obvious that a majority of big
business customers, employees and shareholders voted “NO”. Customers should
boycott these businesses, and shareholders should vote “NO” to their
remuneration reports.
We do not want Two Countries or Two
Flags - get that second flag off the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Our flag denotes
Unity under the Southern Cross – the Black-and-Red flag incites political and
racial division.
We do not want to suffer any more
“Welcomes” to our own country, or any more invented place names. We do not want
race-based treaties from either Albo or State Governments and Peter Dutton
should forget forever his proposed Voice referendum No 2.
This should be the end of
self-flagellation – this generation is not responsible for injuries done to or
by some of our ancestors.
To divide Australians on the basis
of skin colour or length of ancestry is more about politics than about justice.
We are all Australians and constitutional changes that promote apartheid
policies should be permanently rejected.
It is also obvious that most
taxpayer-funded black bureaucracies have failed and should go the way of ATSIC
and be abolished. Welfare should be determined by need, not by skin colour.
To create jobs in Northern
Australia, the federal government should declare a tax holiday for all
businesses based north of the Tropic of Capricorn. No more enquiries – just
remove the shackles.
And despite
having “native title” to far more land per head of population than most other
Australians, many aboriginals live in degraded communal enclaves with poor
community protection, especially for women and children. All Australians need
individual freehold titles they can explore, develop or sell, not communal
titles controlled by bureaucrats, academics and politicians.
Viv
Forbes is a geologist and economic analyst, who farms in Australia.
2 comments:
SBS TV did air an article showing NZ as the poster child for indigenous rights.
The ‘Yes’ side have labelled NO voters racist, the country broken and pleaded the Poor Me case.
In fact, the various Aborigine groups need to define their own aspirations then work out how to achieve them then engage with the world and do so. There will be winners and losers.
A race based political fantasy dressed up as The Voice was never going to be more than a distraction.
Until Aborigines give up the Poor Me ( sorry, I don’t like some of the awful treatment meted out to either Aborigines or ‘convicts’ transported to the other side of the world) and take ownership of their own current and future lives within and as part of Australia, misery will ensue.
Australians are clearly smarter than NZers. Australia chose not to go down a divisive path. They realised they were being sold lies. The core document includes treaties, reparations, special rights, special status, special input. Sound familiar?
While NZ spends the next decade tied in notes around every issue, Australia will leap forward. How many NZers will call Australia home in the future?
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