Aborigines

Fifty Years of Failure Demand Real Truth-Telling

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price is right. What we really need is some genuine “truth telling.” To that end we need a royal commission into the funding of Aboriginal programs over the last so-many years – an audit that gets to the truth of where all those billions of dollars have gone and why they have done so little good.

Financial audit aside, we need another form of truth-telling as well. If there are two things those who argued for and against the Voice referendum have been able to agree on it is that past policies have failed and something new needs to be done. However, if the same people who have been running indigenous affairs’ policy directions in the past are the only ones who are allowed to assess what went wrong and why, and are the only ones who are allowed to formulate the new policy directions, I think we can pretty well assume there will be a cover-up and a doubling down on past policy failures.

What we need, rather than leaving matters in the hands of the usual suspects, is a detailed independent audit of each program, what it has achieved, what worked, what didn’t and why.

There are three aspects this truth-telling need to pursued.

Firstly, in South Australia’s archives and the annual reports of Protectors of Aborigines from the very beginnings of settlement one finds references again and again to programs that emerged as “a good idea” and were put into practice only to fizzle out in failure. Over a cycle of perhaps 30 years, more or less exactly the same failed programs resurface as recycled “new ideas”, get funded and put into practice only to end in failure all over again.

One classic example was the idea that Aborigines should be funded to run small vegetable gardens to provide fruit and vegetables for themselves and for sale in the local mainstream community.  This must have been tried at least four, perhaps five, times in South Australia alone over a period of around 120 years (starting around 1839 near to the current Torrens weir, then Wellington, Swan Reach, the APY Lands) All those efforts ended in failure. [i]  At no time does there appear to have been any will to either document the progress of the programs or identify the considerable cultural barriers to their success. Thus, right up to the present day, program after program is repeatedly implemented and fails, with no lessons learned. It is apparent that the cultural impediments to success have never been explored.

Another example?  It is my understanding that Noel Pearson’s Cape York The Cape York Aboriginal Australian Academy project, which was supposed to improve school attendance and literacy and thereby assist in “closing the gap”, has received millions of dollars. However, some years and many dollars later we discover there has been virtually no improvement over the very worst-performing remote schools, with illiteracy and truancy rates as high as ever. My point is that many such programs have been run … and failed, yet no one seems to have learned anything from the past. Yet such initiatives continue to be funded. He who fails to understand history is condemned to repeat it, as they say.

It is no secret that in traditional Aboriginal culture parents have a very relaxed attitude to the disciplining of children, so much so that compelling them to attend school would not be considered culturally appropriate. James Franklin is but one of many who have pointed to important differences between child-rearing practices in ‘mainstream’ and traditional Aboriginal families (my emphasis):

A normal Western child grows up with a non-stop training in self-restraint, from toilet training through fixed meal and bed-times to regimented and compulsory schooling and sport. Traditional indigenous child-rearing practices, still largely intact, are very different. McKnight states baldly, ‘Children are indulged and rarely disciplined’ (and if one relative attempts discipline, others will step in to prevent it). Black parents were often shocked by how white parents disciplined their children. The indulgent period lasted until the early teenage years, when an extreme level of discipline was suddenly imposed through a violent initiation (for boys) or marriage to an elder (for girls). [ii]                               

Any person who has worked with Aboriginal people in remote communities would have noticed this different attitude to child rearing and foreseen the miserable results. The failure, therefore, is in the lack of detailed advice on Aboriginal cultural attitudes given to those who approved the spending. Where were the “experts” in traditional Aboriginal culture, and why were no warnings issued? If we are really serious about closing that gap these cultural factors need to be factored in before the very start. Why has this never happened? It is a vital question a royal commission would need to address.

 

Secondly, it is a terrible shame on our society, a betrayal of the hard, thankless work of our predecessors, that few under the age of 60 these days are aware that in the past in the remote Aboriginal communities – mostly under the auspices of the Christian missions – there was a near complete lack of domestic violence, child abuse, alcohol abuse, drug dependency, petrol sniffing, no foetal alcohol syndrome, no youth suicide and very low levels of incarceration. Even in the most remote areas there were high levels of literacy and numeracy and high levels of employment. It is only since the supposedly great reformative referendum of the Sixties and the self-determination era of the Seventies that dysfunction in Aboriginal communities has exploded. The failure of Voice proponents to acknowledge this demonstrates an outrageous ingratitude to early workers in the field and, no less, to the long-suffering Australian taxpayer. It is, in a word, shameful.

We need to understand why the so-called “intergenerational trauma”, so often attributed to white settlement, only erupted on the ex-missions when supposedly enlightened policies were implemented and the former ways abandoned. Surely the timing is no coincidence. We really need to explore that chronology of decline if we are serious about improving conditions. I suspect a key ingredient was the change in the discipline of anthropology that occurred in the Sixties and Seventies.  Prior to that, anthropologists were primarily focussed on fitting Aboriginal culture into the broader picture of global human development. However, by that stage, Aboriginal groups with cultures intact were becoming much more difficult to find, while the number of anthropologists coming out of the universities steadily climbed.  Rather than the discipline become extinct for lack of research material, the focus shifted to advocacy on behalf of Aborigines by professionals who could “interpret” Aboriginal culture to the government and the courts – in effect acting as go-betweens in negotiations between Aborigines and the mainstream community.  It was also during this period that anthropologists began to propose policies arising from their supposed “expertise” in the field, but largely based on ideology rather than the real situation on the ground.  The previous workers, particularly in the mission workers, who had pursued policies based not on academic theory but on practical experience gained over many years of trial and error, were sidelined and their advice derided.

The problem with the take-over by the professional anthropologists was twofold. Firstly, the role of the anthropologists, like that of lawyers in our court system, became to spin an appropriate yarn which would put the interests of their “clients” in the most favourable light. And second, there were virtually no anthropologists prepared to articulate counter-arguments to the ideas advanced by other anthropologists. One gets a brief insight into this malaise by considering the charlatan Bruce Pascoe and his entirely invented narrative of Aboriginal “farmers” living in settled communities. Alternatively, one can go back to the Hindmarsh Island Bridge affair and Chris Kenny’s excellent case study in “noble cause corruption” and the fabrication of “sacred women’s business”. [iii] )

As a geologist trying to get site clearances [iv] for drilling in Aboriginal lands, many of the anthropologists with whom I worked made no secret how much they were prepared to manipulate “traditional” Aboriginal culture to ensure a successful outcome for their clients.  “That’s where I earn my money,” said one anthropologist to me in remote Western Australia.

One telling example of a policy championed by anthropologists was the so-called “outstation movement”, which saw anthropologists assure us that remote-area Aborigines wanted to return to their traditional lands. Many millions of dollars were spent building these outstations and constructing many houses (with sophisticated extras such as solar electricity with backup diesel generators, running water, microwave communications links…). And yet some of these outstations, perhaps even the majority, were being abandoned even before they were completed.  Thus anthropologist Professor Peter Sutton, one of the greatest advocates of the outstation movement in the 1970s, reported in his landmark book The Politics of Suffering:

With me [Sutton] based at Watha-nhiin, David Martin at Kendall River north, and the Adamses spending time at Ti-Tree, outstation development proliferated until up to 300 Aurukun people were spending at least Dry Season time out in their countries. That era had come gradually to a close by the 1990s, when only a small number of diehards abandoned the allurement of town to spend time in the bush beyond daily commuting distance from Aurukun. During my visits to Aurukun in the dry seasons of 2006 and 2007 and, as reported by me in 2008, not a single outstation was occupied.  [v]

Sutton added, just to remind us that a lack of funding was not the issue

Funding for outstation development was by then far more substantial than it had been at the height of the re-occupation of traditional countries in the 1970s and 1980s.

Thus, the government was apparently still funding the outstation movement even after support from Aborigines themselves had collapsed. Why has there never been any admission of failure and the waste of taxpayer money? Rather, the movement’s failure is still largely being suppressed.

While drilling in the APY lands in north-west South Australia some years ago, an abandoned outstation near our drill site (one of perhaps 30 abandoned outstations in the APY area alone) was suddenly repaired and cleaned up by a team brought up maybe a thousand kilometres from Port Pirie at what was no doubt great expense. We were told there was a parliamentary delegation from Canberra about to visit and the outstation, a la a Potemkin Village, need to appear clean, functional and occupied. The clean-up crew had removed a desiccated dingo carcass and tumbleweeds from a kitchen when, just as suddenly as they arrived, the cleaners disappeared, having been told the VIPs’ visit had been cancelled. The outstation remained abandoned and the tumbleweeds soon returned. [vi]

To be totally fair, I was informed that the reason that the outstation had been abandoned was because there had been a death in the house and the occupants feared the prospect of the deceased’s spirit lingering on. I understand from the literature that this would be a considered completely normal state of affairs under traditional culture beliefs. Just as a campsite might be abandoned until it could be safely assumed the spirit had moved on, so was modern housing for the same reason. (As an aside,  I’m not sure that particular reason is particularly convincing in the modern era, given the number of deaths in the regular communities which remain as habitations despite of the threat of wandering spirits.)  But even so, if the haunting excuse is accepted as reasonable, it rather poses a question about why the Department of Aboriginal Affairs would be so ignorant or dismissive as to spend so much constructing permanent outstation buildings while knowing they could be abandoned at a moment’s notice under traditional cultural practice. The key question: how could the advising anthropologists, supposedly so connected to traditional Aboriginal culture, get it so wrong?  Consider it an example of anthropologists projecting and lobbying for their fantasy of what the modern iteration of traditional culture should be.

WE HAVE had 50 years of failure in Aboriginal policies, and this has needed to be obscured by 50 years of anthropological spin. The real barriers to the success — embedded in Aboriginal culture itself — have been hidden from sight in order to not upset indigenous sentiment. Solidarity with the client-base is everything!

And now we come to the third aspect of truth-telling that warrants a royal commission’s attention.

As stated earlier, in the remote-area communities of the Fifties and Sixties there was almost a complete lack of domestic violence, likewise child abuse, alcoholism, drug dependency, petrol sniffing and the slather of other ills afflicting remote communities. In 2023 the situation is almost completely the polar opposite of the mission era. There is much complaint in the communities about this grievous situation, and yet if you were to ask if they would prefer to go back to the missionary era, the vast majority would not exchange their current situations, however bad. Without being the least bit cynical, if closing the gap requires high levels of school attendance, regular work and a reduction in the supply of alcohol and drugs, well there would be considerable resistance. The simple fact is that integration into mainstream Australia has always been an option for Aborigines — an option consistently rejected by a certain section of their population.

An example of what I mean can be seen in the different attitudes between Aborigines and the mainstream to community violence.  Of course Aborigines are concerned about violence in their communities – and, indeed, are very likely to complain about it – but to what extent would they accept changes to reduce it? While there may be much complaining about the levels of violence in the communities in general, I don’t see any real groundswell of support for action, particularly action by police or the courts, against the individual perpetrators of violent acts.

This contradiction can be seen in the Kurduju Report, authored in 2003 by Peter Ryan. Subtitled “Types of Violence Impacting Centralian Communities”, it deals with the attitude of indigenous community members to violence within their own communities, effectively categorising the different types of violence and allocating them as different examples of pre-existing cultural norms.  Indeed, the report notes there is community lobbying to incorporate certain non-standard types of violence (like the use of formerly unsanctioned weapons) into “traditional culture” in order to normalise their use. Thus the different styles of violence are considered to be “culturally appropriate” — ritual violence, Yarda sorcery, payback etc…

Incidentally, one particular type of traditional violence often overlooked in some remote communities and missing from Ryan’s list of violences is the practice of “cruelling” children. Anthropologist Peter Sutton described the practice [vii] :

‘This seems to be done ostensibly for the purpose of encouraging self-assertion, although deeper and less functional explanations to do with repressed anger and jealousy on the part of the instigator are probably relevant.’

‘Cruelling’ is most commonly done by relatives who pinch the infant’s cheek hard enough to bring tears, kiss the child in a biting manner, or slap it, and who may then offer part of their own body for a good hard striking by the child … Similar patterns of cruelling of infants are reported for … (followed by a long list of regions)

‘Cruelling’ is only one traditional child-rearing practice that is relevant to adult patterns of violence. More significant is a reluctance to control the anger of children, especially boys against women, and a reluctance to curb physical fighting among children. In Ryan’s list there is no mention of “intergenerational trauma” — except, perhaps, under one category described as “Cyclical Family, Estate Owner and Language Group feuding” where we are informed that this type of violence relates to the cyclical nature of ongoing disputes between feuding families, estate owners and different language groups. We are then told …

In some Centralian communities the origins of the disputes are thought to pre-date contact and settlement.

The point here is that all these different forms of violence are well documented and understood within both Aboriginal and the professional anthropological communities – but who is openly talking about them or addressing the implications?  Instead, as the outsiders perceive it, all violence is categorised as being fueled by “intergenerational trauma” related to settlement, which allows the anthropological fraternity and the broader Aboriginal Industry to sheet the blame for Aboriginal community violence away from their clients and their traditional practices and attach them to an outside party. This is duplicitous and means the true underlying issues have never been fully aired nor dealt with.

The main revelation of the report though is summed up thus

The Kurduju Committee met at Lajamanu in August 2002. They were concerned about what appeared to be discrepancies in the collection of data on family and community violence between government agencies such as police, health clinic and courts and community organisations such as night patrols, safe house staff and Elders. They were concerned this was leading to different perceptions about what was happening in the communities. Often community organisations were reporting declines in the levels of violence but government agencies were reporting there were no changes.

The Committee’s concern was that what was being counted as community violence by the police etc. was really just the normal, day-to-day, “pushing and shoving” associated with standard traditional cultural practices. The police and the communities in many instances had completely different understandings of what constituted “violence” and therefore different levels of toleration.  Thus, to many Aborigines, even the current levels of community violence were being interpreted by them as culturally “normal,” and certainly would not be seen as a sufficient reason to change anything or sacrifice the lifestyle that they already have.

“Closing the Gap” has been consistently rejected by many Aborigines over the last hundred years.  Is it now to be implemented by force?  By coercion?  By white mainstream institutions against the will of  Aborigines themselves? That policy was never acceptable, even at the height of the missionary era.  I suggest that any attempt at coercive policies would fail just as they have done so many times in the past. If one considers Noel Pearson’s failed education initiative, I cannot see why anyone would believe a nebulous Voice in Canberra could exert any more influence over Cape York’s school students than Noel Pearson has been able to do – and, therefore, the whole agenda appears to be based more on wishful thinking than any on-the-ground reality. Such fantasies really need to be exposed to full daylight.

WHAT is needed before all else is a royal commission which looks at traditional culture’s barriers to Aboriginal advancement and how these have failed to be properly addressed by past programs. It needs to look at the on-going failure of professional anthropology to provide advice which actually improves conditions and to find more reliable sources of information and insight.  Perhaps it should even look for a single example of a hunter-gatherer society anywhere in the world that has successfully transitioned into the modern era. Perhaps culture holds the trump card against good will.

In particular, a royal commission needs to appoint specific legal representation on behalf of past ministers and bureaucrats, former mission workers and, of course, the taxpayers in order to provide a balanced assessment of past policies and their architects. The inquiry into the so-called Stolen Generations, which never allowed any evidence from opposing voices, should not be allowed again.

So let us bring on a royal commission and have some genuine truth-telling. We’ve gone far too long without it.

 

[i]  See …   Crooks, A. and Lane, J., 2016. Voices From The Past : Extracts from the Annual Reports of the South Australian Chief Protectors of Aborigines, 1837 onwards.  Hoplon Press.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/33259405-voices-from-the-past

[ii]  Franklin, James, 2008. The Cultural Roots of Violence. Quadrant Magazine.

http://www.quadrant.org.au/magazine/issue/2008/451/the-cultural-roots-of-aboriginal-violence

[iii]  Kenny, Christopher, 1996, Women’s Business: It would be nice if there was some women’s business: The Story Behind the Hindmarsh Island Affair. Duffy and Snellgrove.

[iv]  “Site clearances”- Identifying with the elders sacred sites and culturally sensitive areas to be avoided during drilling programs.

[v]  Sutton, Professor Peter, 2009, pp 24-25. The Politics of Suffering: Indigenous Australia and the end of the liberal consensus. Melbourne University Press.

[vi]  This anecdote was published in the May, 2019 edition of  Quadrant Magazine under the title De-prioritising the Truth   and republished on line.

https://quadrant.org.au/magazine/2019/05/de-prioritising-truth-in-remote-communities/

[vii] Sutton, Professor Peter, 2009, pp111 -113.The Politics of Suffering: Indigenous Australia and the end of the liberal consensus. Melbourne University Press.

[viii]  Crooks, Alistair, 2022.    The Voice and its Ten Glaring Pitfalls Quadrant Online 10th June 2022

https://quadrant.org.au/opinion/aborigines/2022/06/the-voice-and-its-ten-glaring-pitfalls/

 

[ix]  See the Dreaming and other essays by Bill Stanner.

  https://www.blackincbooks.com.au/books/dreaming-other-essays

20 thoughts on “Fifty Years of Failure Demand Real Truth-Telling

  • Stephen Ireland says:

    Thank you again, Alistair. One is reminded again of Pournelles Iron Law of Bureaucracy, a law now clearly replicated in academia as pointed out, with evidence, by Thomas Sowell in his Intellectuals and Society 2009.

    I was startled to see Sutton & Walshe pinpoint the event that caused the wheels to fall off Anthropology and turn it into a forerunner of the Cultural Studies epidemic that now infests Western universities.

    ‘A conference titled ‘Man the Hunter’ was held in 1966 in the United States and generated enormous interest in its challenge to orthodox views on hunter-gatherers. It inspired new methodologies as well as revisionist feminist responses, and the proceedings, published in in 1968, were soon followed by an impactful titled Stone Age Economics. Fieldwork on hunter-gatherers during the 1960s and 1970s gathered a range of case studies sufficient to upset the social evolutionary view of hunter-gatherer life as in all ways inferior to that of the farmer. Scholars could no longer perpetuate the view that the emergence of agriculture had involved ‘progression from the hardship of the hunters lonely nomadic and hungry life to one of security and sociability.’

    Peter Sutton and Keryn Walshe Farmers or Hunter-Gatherers? The Dark Emu Debate 2021 p 176

    References:Richard B Lee & Irven DeVore, Man the Hunter 1968
    Bryony Orme, ‘The Advantages of Agriculture’. In JVS Megaw (ed.), Hunters, Gatherers
    and First Farmers beyond Europe: An Archaeological Survey 1971, p 41
    Marshall Sahlins, Stone Age Economics 1972
    Francis Dahlberg (ed.), Woman the Gatherer 1981 [feminist revision]

    SDI

  • colin_jory says:

    Most informative, most enlightening, most persuasive, Alistair Crooks. Regarding the endless repetition, in slightly different iterations, of failed policies intended for the welfare of remote-area or fringe-area Australian Aborigines, I recall Chesterton’s observation: “Nine out of ten of what we call new ideas are simply old mistakes.” However, I would be very, very wary of seeking “a royal commission into the funding of Aboriginal programs over the last so-many years”, as distinct from a less Olympian-status investigation. Too many Royal Commissions, beginning with the Whitlam Government’s 1974-77 Royal Commission on Human Relationships and extending through to the 2013-17 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, have proved to be disingenuous exercises in the promotion of grubby ideologies and partisan causes.

    • Lewis P Buckingham says:

      The fallout from the latter RC was that Catholic Schools are the safest places for children to go to, judging by the over reach of the Catholic Church in having everyone checked by police and given training on child protection be they readers, cleaners or choristers.
      Yet depending on the jurisdiction, say Victoria, there is a watered down investigation of local state schools and the process of justice has just missed the mark on the lawyer X saga.
      So anecdotal reports and the occasional report in the medical literature is all that is to be seen on cranio maxillary fracture rates, FAS, HIV and sexually transmitted serological surveys of underage aboriginal children.
      But the Yes camp must be aware of this.
      As a No voter I saw the absolute powerlessness of the present movers and shakers to implement real change to protect our most vulnerable.
      It was clear they did not know themselves what to do and see the problem as one only government can fix, but Yes also need to respond actively.
      When the Yes manifest came out after the sorrow period it was in grave denial of manifest disability and dysfunction in some aboriginal communities.
      My conversations with the indigenous last week did not come to a thunderous halt because of sorrow.
      It was as if the referendum was of no account.
      Driving around aboriginal areas of Sydney Yes placards were noticeable by their absence.
      It was as if the Yes were singing to the choir.
      The little children still suffer.
      Any RC would have to be given the powers to bring in all the players.
      As suggested, this may not work, just look at the 36 RC’s into bushfires, they still do minimal hazard reduction and build in fire zones.
      It could also become a witch hunt.
      Australia needs competent leadership greater than those leading the Yes campaign.
      They would have brought us ‘the bullet in the head of the constitution’.
      At least Yes comprehensively, as they stumbled about, showed they did not have the ability to lead us to a better future than now, just an endless division.

      • pmprociv says:

        That was the big irony of the entire Yes campaign: they wanted to tell the government how to fix their problems for them, yet they first wanted that same government to set up a voice for them! After years of gab-festing and flitting around, much of it in business class, all they could come up with was that Uluru Statement (one page, in the end, if you accepted their lying, final word). Doesn’t instil much confidence for the notion of “autonomy and self-determination”.

  • call it out says:

    Very good, Alistair. A true reconciliation must start with the truth. Your work advances that.

  • lhackett01 says:

    The demands for a Royal Commission into tracking expenditure on Aboriginal issues will be worthless unless it also reveals why the money that actually does reach its intended targets fails to have effect.

    The Queensland Government is considering creating a local voice on Mornington Island, where spending has risen 81 percent in the last six years but failed to improve outcomes.(Local voice on cards for remote island, 24/10)

    This is the situation prevailing widely across Australia. The reason for these failures that a Royal Commission would find is culture. Culture prevents many Aborigines from accepting ‘white man’s’ help. Many Aborigines believe ‘their ways’ must be retained.

    The situation will be improved only when those Aborigines decide, with government help, to ensure they and their children get a modern education uninterrupted by ‘sorry business’ and the like; when they are prepared to work and to move to places where jobs exist; when they stop the cultural practise of ‘humbugging’; when they understand that their poor health is in large part due to their living in self-generated unhygienic conditions; when they stop allowing sorcery to influence their lives; when they stop entrenched,traditional, family-based kinship rivalry; and the like.

  • Geoffrey T. says:

    Well said Alistair. Much more needs to be done to fully inform the voting masses to the true situation, causes and effects in remote indigenous communities and the vested interests in the ‘industry’ that has built up to supposedly help those communities.

    The current and forthcoming ‘truth telling’ will most likely use select pieces of truth to further embellish the story that the Indigenous peoples viewed themselves as a nation prior to the arrival of the British, and that as a nation they never ceded sovereignty to the British ‘invaders’. This is the story the Indigenous activists want embedded into the conscience of non-Indigenous Australia. From that can flow separate sovereignty, law and justice systems and of course, reparations.

  • Alistair says:

    Thanks Geoffrey T.
    Of course, as you point out, there can be no “truth-telling” until after the “Misinformation/Disinformation Bill gets passed and the professional “elite” can regain control of their version of “truth”. We have seen with the referendum what happens when they lose control of the narrative! We know that these days for the professional “elites” the truth is whatever the political agenda requires. “Men can have babies and menstruate” now being accepted as profound scientific “truth”.

    see Crooks Trofim Lysenko looks down and smiles.
    https://quadrant.org.au/opinion/doomed-planet/2021/01/trofim-lysenko-looks-down-and-smiles/

  • pmprociv says:

    Thanks, Alistair, for dredging up the truth that must be told, and widely. Anyone familiar with earlier anthropological works, even those of WEH Stanner, would be fully aware of just how integral violence was (and still is) to Aboriginal culture. The constant bleating about needing to preserve “traditional culture’ is farcical, given how today’s remote lifestyles are 100% dependent on external inputs, including food housing, transport, health services, power and entertainment, childhood education, policing etc.. The locals’ worldview is a form of cargo-cultism, enabling them to cherry-pick from both “traditional culture” and what the outsiders freely provide. They treat their outstations essentially as holiday camps, from which they come and go for complex reasons, often on a whim. We constantly hear of over-crowded housing (inevitable with numerous “relations” coming and going, humbugging for food, money, vehicles and accommodation), but never of all those empty houses in abandoned outstations with all that other infrastructure mentioned above. Nor of all the damage resulting from mindless vandalism.

    Today’s (24/10/23) The Conversation just happens to have an article demanding better digital connectivity for those remote communities [ ‘Digital inclusion’ and closing the gap: how First Nations leadership is key to getting remote communities online (theconversation.com) ], as though this were a universal human right, without any consideration of the technical challenges or costs. While ostensibly this is to improve kids’ education, and “economic activity”, in the real world it will mainly facilitate “sorry business”, drug dealing, gang warfare and access to pornography, the last possibly a major contributor to child sexual abuse.

    Royal commissions are usually deflective exercises — we know what the problems are; the challenge is finding politicians and administrators with the guts and drive to say them out loud, and work conscientiously for a solution. Of course, there’ll be loud and hostile opposition: too many have vested interests in the current situation, starting with leaders within those remote communities, who don’t want change, preferring to use the status quo as a lever for their own personal advantage.

    • W.A. Reid says:

      Violence? That cannot be possible:

      ‘I wanted to be here to remind you all of the love we have for one another – a love that has served us for the last 60,000 years to be the longest-continuing culture of anywhere in the world.’

      ‘Indigenous’ TV host Brooke Boney reveals why she anchored Channel Nine’s Voice coverage despite knowing the Yes campaign would lose.

  • Watchman Williams says:

    Your article is an exemplary demonstration of the underlying idiocy of all leftist social policy outcome; replacing what works with what feels good.
    The major change in aboriginal policy occurred after the 1967 referendum that, in effect, gave the Commonwealth responsibility for aboriginal affairs over the states. Citizens thought they were voting for equal rights and responsibilities for aboriginal people but, as it turned out, the Deep State interpreted the referendum result in a different way. Thus, seperate development, a.k.a apartheid, became the policy.
    Up until that time, assimilation was the overriding objective of aboriginal policy, aimed at integrating the disparate tribal aboriginals into Australian society. However, governments listened to the mostly white, part aboriginals and the policy became “traditional lifestyle”.
    All of the cultural breakdowns that you refer to in your article derive from that decision, which was promoted by Nugget Coombes and Gough Whitlam. The traditional lifestyle of a nomadic hunter-gathering people is now impossible and, instead, Atco huts, bores, government payments, trucked in food and the flying doctor service, are today all part of the life of remote aboriginal communities.
    A return to assimilation as the goal of aboriginal policy, would be a return to sanity.

    • David Isaac says:

      As Lawrie Ayres says below, assimilation without hybridisation seems to be difficult. It’s an incredibly difficult ethical problem the obvious solutions to which are taboo.

      Why would we want a population of understandably irresponsible, violent, frustrated paleolithic people which keeps growing by dint of our support? Then again perhaps the global overlords are thinking the same about us, as they fondle their latest battle robot?

  • rosross says:

    Well done Alistair. When they say truth telling they don’t mean real truths about the best and worst of everyone they mean their lies and fantasies they call truths which demonise those without aboriginal ancestry.

    I did not think aborigines had bows and arrows. Hardly continuous as they keep claiming.

  • Lawrie Ayres says:

    Lets face it. Full blood Aborigines don’t seem terribly bright until they have an infusion of European blood. It is only then they seem capable of moving on from the stone age. We know the current Aborigine came from India about 4000 years ago so this 65000 years of occupation is false. The only thing that is true is that in all that time there was no improvement to their well being. It is unlikely there will be much improvement until there is some cross breeding.

  • lbloveday says:

    Stan Grant sounds off.
    .
    “Our nation is set in stone: one word, ‘No’. Whatever hope there may be for a different Australia, I likely won’t live to see it,”
    .
    https://todayspaper.theaustralian.com.au/infinity/article_popover_share.aspx?guid=37c4cbf5-e02a-4129-a297-f2632d141f26

  • Michael Mundy says:

    ….we need a royal commission into the funding of Aboriginal programs over the last so-many years – an audit that gets to the truth of where all those billions of dollars have gone and why they have done so little good.

    That in effect was the stealthy reasoning for the creation of The Voice by Yes proponents. Using the poverty porn images of dysfunctional remote communities and a distorted simplistic national statistical snapshot of The Gap gave them their focus for The Voice. At no time did they reference the good outcomes of government expenditure for aboriginals living in logistically serviceable cities. It didn’t suit their ‘all blackfellas are in dire peril’ narrative, It suited their cause to accentuate the negative. There are hundreds of outstanding programs designed, staffed and run by aboriginals that provide employment and opportunities for other aboriginals that are prepared to locate themselves in serviceable centres. If there is to be an audit then it needs to identify the link between location and program success.

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