True Believer wrote:plugger66 wrote:satchmo wrote:
Didn't anyone else read this?
Very powerful stuff. Great to hear from the more relevant perspective at last.
I heard Nova Peris. She said nothing like that. She seems pretty relevant to me.
Right - so an opinion from a full-blood aboriginal man, about purported racism towards a part aboriginal footballer, is to be dismissed out of hand because it doesn't conform to the prevailing orthodoxy being sought by the wailing classes......
The wailing classes: good one. Just like Johnny Howard's chattering classes for all dissenters. How about we call each other names cos that's the way forward. Just one to the keepers of the status quo there.
Everyone of all opinions can find someone more respected and eloquent to support their view.
I read this the article Satchmo linked to. I can see his point, that's his opinion. I agree with some bits, not with others.
But making his opinion gospel just because he is an aboriginal is just like saying all Aboriginal people feel the same, want the same, identify with aboriginality the same, identify with aussieness the same, essentially are the same.
Just like saying that Alan Jones and I want the same and feel the same because we're both white.
In other words, its racist!
So everyone can find an aboriginal voice to support their own views - loads of Aboriginal people don't give 2 s***s about land rights either, and are happy to mine the f*** out of their ancestors' land.
Back to Adam Goodes - a pampered prince perhaps but you keyboard warriors decrying him as a softcock will probably never get to feel how he felt or is feeling, living nice and safe in Australian suburbs and cities.
When you're booing him as is your freedom in a nice big stadium built on the back of players such as him, think of yourselves and your ancestors being treated like a mixture of animals and deviants just for being you.
The closest a white Australian could ever get to that experience is maybe moving to Saudi Arabia or Pakistan, but then you are not a native of the land do its still not quite as hurtful.