2am or not, we do have rules around plagiarism, so please do ensure it's signposted as somebody else's writing next time (the best way to do this is to use quote tags). We're not keen on Facebook/email fwd copy paste jobs, but next time please at least add a note on top saying "a friend sent me this", or whatever. Consider that a mods' note, socialist or otherwise.Skids wrote:Calm down Jack.nomadjack wrote:
Don't see even a hint of irony in these two comments from your post Skids?
You'll notice I posted this around 2am this morning after getting an email regarding it from a friend who runs a pastoral lease in the Gascoyne which is the size of a small African country.
It's not 'my' post, I should have posted it more in lines with rule 97, part 4b of the Nick's left wing socialist party movement... but I was tired.
I could change it to the comrades liking, but I'm sure it will be edited if it doesn't conform. I put it here as a piece of information, I did sign the petition at my mates request.
If your friend literally has property the size of a small African country, doesn't that tend to suggest that it's rather likely that he might have one or more Aboriginal cultural heritage sites on his land? I can understand why he and other farmers might be annoyed about this, but I think it's pretty obvious why this law has been brought in: far too many sites have been wantonly destroyed on private land (often by big miners).
Like it or not, he, like the rest of us, are living on stolen Aboriginal land that was never ceded. Whether it be native title, reconciliation, treaty or whatever, part of moving forward as a united country entails acknowledging traditional ownership and putting protections in place to ensure that the land is respected. It seems to me that that's what this WA act is all about.