Re: Rudd to say Sorry on February 12
Evilo said:
so once we officially say sorry, what do you think they will want then? money! no shit!
Why shouldn't people be compensated for being taken from their parents as children for the sake of an idiotic policy?
Evilo said:
Except that the High Court in Mabo decided that freehold land cannot be claimed under native title. And aboriginal people are, funnily enough, just ordinary people who don't particularly want to take your house by persuading the government to change the law. But let's not let 'facts' and 'reality' get in the way of paranoia.
Evilo said:
and then every Kid in Australia will be learning aborigional as a second language in primary school.
Your argument would be a lot more solid if you didn't resort to this far-fetched nightmarish vision of aborigines taking over the country as a debating point. And what's so horrific about learning an aboriginal language anyway?
Evilo said:
If you seriosuly think saying sorry is a positve contribution towards australia's economy (or its welbeing) then you are fucked in the head. I'm not saying sorry for something that our ancestors did over 3 generations ago.
Not everything governments do is about the economy. And yes, an apology will contribute to our national wellbeing, because it'll allow us to move on from a sorry episode in our history. Speaking of which, don't commentate on the stolen generations if you think it was 3 generations ago. Child removal as an official policy only stopped in the 1960s.
Evilo said:
Do you apologise to every person you meet because your grandfather was not a very nice person?
OH MY GOD it's not a personal admission of inherited responsibility, it's a statement that the Australian government carried out a terrible policy, and more generally that aborigines were horribly mistreated for more than a century, and that the government and the people
as a whole are sorry that it happened. Why is this so objectionable?
(Post edited a bit for clarity and a more pleasant tone)