impervious182
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- Aug 23, 2007
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- 2005
Haha... how did I know you would be the first person to say that.Trefoil said:Hmm, nope. Definitely plague.
Haha... how did I know you would be the first person to say that.Trefoil said:Hmm, nope. Definitely plague.
There's only been one Aboriginal member of Federal parliament, being Senator Neville Bonner.Trefoil said:Haven't the Greens and Family First had aboriginal ministers?
And Senator Aden Ridgeway.withoutaface said:There's only been one Aboriginal member of Federal parliament, being Senator Neville Bonner.
An Asian PM is more likely than an aboriginal. There is an asian cabinet minister currently.ur_inner_child said:You think the equivalent for us is aboriginal? because they're black or???
I would've thought Asian (despite how little they've assimilated).
Still painfully unlikely though.
...and Aden Ridgeway, a Democratwithoutaface said:There's only been one Aboriginal member of Federal parliament, being Senator Neville Bonner.
It really isn't. The Constitution is primarily concerned with assigning powers to the states and federal government and creating the organs of federal government i.e. the senate, the legislative assembly, the judiciary and the executive. Read the Constitution. You could try to claim that our modern legal system is founded upon Christian values, but even that isn't clear (as you claimed). The only seven commandments that made the statute books are murder and theft, and those are pretty universally frowned upon regardless of a countries culture or religion.reh said:I shall rephrase... where i say 'founded on christian values'....replace with 'influenced by Christian values'
i was alluding to the idea that the society from which australia originated was largely christian.
From what I understand Obama is only half african-american, and his 'black' father is a Kenyan rather than an african-american person.reh said:Given the imminent potential success of the first African-American Presidential Candidate, lets turn our eyes to our own shores. Is it possible/reasonable to assume an Aboriginal will have success in a Federal Election in the future?
We'll probabyl never knowRafy said:And Senator Aden Ridgeway.
Notable that both were Senators. I doubt you'll see an aboriginal MP for a while yet.
An Asian PM is more likely than an aboriginal. There is an asian cabinet minister currently.
Murder certainly isn't frowned upon when a woman commits adultery in a Islamic state... They are still stoned to death i am led to belive, at least executed for this crimeneo o said:It really isn't. The Constitution is primarily concerned with assigning powers to the states and federal government and creating the organs of federal government i.e. the senate, the legislative assembly, the judiciary and the executive. Read the Constitution. You could try to claim that our modern legal system is founded upon Christian values, but even that isn't clear (as you claimed). The only seven commandments that made the statute books are murder and theft, and those are pretty universally frowned upon regardless of a countries culture or religion.
Why is the equivalent of an african-american going for president the equivalent of an aborigine running for prime minister?always.dreaming said:From what I understand Obama is only half african-american, and his 'black' father is a Kenyan rather than an african-american person.
So I guess maybe if the candidate running for PM was only half aboriginal.
And his aboriginal parent belonged to a different country.
i.e. if one of Obama's children married Mel Mclaughlin.