stui magpie wrote:watt price tully wrote:Bucks5 wrote:Is this Policital correctness gone mad?
Nope but I would have it on a different day. It's not just Aboriginals (or some / most) but many others including yours truly see it as Invasion Day
(personally I can't see how anyone could see it as anything other but we all have our views) - have no issue with it what so ever.
28 January though? I'm just not too sure of that days significance though.
Need some popcorn though as I wait for the Australian & other shock jocks to feign & spew forth their outrage, apoplexy & indignation
I find the term Invasion day insulting. A european nation started to colonise a continent inhabited by a fragmented collection of stone age tribes who had distinguished themselves in their 60,000 years of occupancy by inventing no higher technology than the stick, directly contributing to the extinction of multiple species of flora and fauna and irrevocably altering the environment and climate.
Anyone who genuinely thinks they're worse off now than before white settlement is living in an alternate reality.
I have no idea why you would find the term invasion day insulting. Your choice.
I would simply call it empathy.
I'm the lucky recipient of British Colonisation of Australia but that doesn't mean I can't see how it affected & affects Aboriginal Australians.
For a long time on Nicks I've advocated for a different day to celebrate a day for all Australians.
To me 1 January is the logical day however it is also New Years Day so can't really do that on a practical level.
I'm not too sure which day it ought to be.
Having said that, we should acknowledge 26 January but not call it Australia day. It could well be:
* Boat people day,
* Prison hulk day,
* the antecedents to Eugenics day
* Transportation day,
* Bringing stodgy food to the Great Southern Land Day
In addition to the acknowledgement of this day of colonisation & the beginnings of European civilisation in Australia day it is also & at the same time an
Invasion Day.
This doesn't not need to be an either or argument & does not need to be mutually exclusive, it is both.
The argument that we are better off now is a red herring - it is irrelevant to the the notion of 26 January being amongst other things an invasion day.
“I even went as far as becoming a Southern Baptist until I realised they didn’t keep ‘em under long enough” Kinky Friedman