Lentern
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2008
- Messages
- 4,978
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2008
I do, I'm sick of the war on symbolism Australians seem to have at the moment. Symbols matter.katie tully said:Write her a letter.
Do you think it'll make any difference?
Students helping students, join us in improving Bored of Studies by donating and supporting future students!
I do, I'm sick of the war on symbolism Australians seem to have at the moment. Symbols matter.katie tully said:Write her a letter.
Do you think it'll make any difference?
Because to be a symbol it must be representing something of substance.zimmerman8k said:Why?
Abos were used for slave labour?Lentern said:Oh dear lord. You cannot honestly be so convinced of your own rhetoric to think the status quo is self induced and that the government as institution who proffitted off their slave labour and who profitted from their stolen land does not owe the communities support, tolerance and apology in order for them to effectively recover.
By the same logic we should excuse the Jews of genocide and ethnic cleansing and setting up death camps...Riet said:Jews.
Ofcourse they were treated as slaves, one of the biggest contributers to the increasingly hard life of farmers is that they can no longer use indigenous labour like they used to creating an imbalance in what people expect to pay for the produce and what it costs to produce them.boris said:Abos were used for slave labour?
And no, i dont believe that they are owed welfare that doesn't encourage them to better themselves. Sure support, tolerance and a fucking apology. They have these things already? So why are they not getting better? Why does it seem that they are getting worse?
fucking lol, you didnt just say thatone of the biggest contributers to the increasingly hard life of farmers is that they can no longer use indigenous labour like they used to creating an imbalance in what people expect to pay for the produce and what it costs to produce them.
I'm not suggesting farmers are lazy or heartless or anything derogative, simply that fifty years ago there was labour from indigenous Australians that cost next to nothing. There was a balance between what buyers would pay for the produce and what farmers were needing in order to make it. When labour steadilly got more expensive with indigenous liberation the cost of operating the farms would have gotten higher and the buyers were probably not very interested in hearing excuses. You're not about to tell me that the inability to use indigenous Australian cheap labour at places like the wave hill cattle station made it easier to turn a profit?katie tully said:fucking lol, you didnt just say that
Oh come now you surely didn't expect that to work on me did you?Iron said:Yeah, i'd agree that improvements in farming efficiency have been bad for Aboriginals. Without the economic basis for many remote Aboriginal communities, this cultural defeat and victim mentality become hard to avoid
Aww shucks!Iron said:lol Lentern. You have the same clumsy, overblown rhetoric I myself had before university. A mixture of several male role models and a vague attempt to mimic their style without much of the substance. One is gratified by your arduous gas-baggery in terms of the aforementioned commentary
boris said:Abos were used for slave labour?
And no, i dont believe that they are owed welfare that doesn't encourage them to better themselves. Sure support, tolerance and a fucking apology. They have these things already? So why are they not getting better? Why does it seem that they are getting worse?
What would you call forced labour in substandard conditions for little or no pay?chicky_pie said:Lmao I agree, Abos were never used as slaves. Look at them now, leeching our tax money, and even in America, African Americans do not get the benefits that Aboriginals do here, and African Americans went through more than Aboriginals.
Oh, you know, just getting on with teachers a bit too much and thinking that Dad had a lot of endless, infalliable magic. But then you meet clever young people at uni, quickly learn the virtues of simple English for communicating ideas in essays, and have scores of she-devil girlfriends who hack away at your heart. All these things helped me narrow the gap between an inkling towards bombastic/arcaic styles and the most efficient way to communicateLentern said:Aww shucks!
Actually you have hit far too close to him for comfort. Did you too dazzle many a peer then speak to an adult intellectual only for them to raise an amused but hardly impressed eyebrow at you ? I would probably describe my biggest role models (when it comes to speech style) as Peter Roebuck, David Marr and Sir Humphrey Appleby.
Surely it's hard to let go of? After I discovered the pluralization issue of agenda and agendum and spoke to my ancient history teacher about it who was a wordsmith he said something to the effect of"You're right in that "an agenda" is probably wrong, but in the common vernacular it's probably ok to treat it as a collective noun. With that being said, I doubt you have any interest in speaking the common vernacular." The man understood me, surely you cherished your words?Iron said:Oh, you know, just getting on with teachers a bit too much and thinking that Dad had a lot of endless, infalliable magic. But then you meet clever young people at uni, quickly learn the virtues of simple English for communicating ideas in essays, and have scores of she-devil girlfriends who hack away at your heart. All these things helped me narrow the gap between an inkling towards bombastic/arcaic styles and the most efficient way to communicate
That's pretty much any decent lecturer. Outside of something shit like cultural studies, I guess.Riet said:Yeh I do engineering. You can waffle on as much as you want but the professor will just be like "prove it."
