Greens should just shut up and listen by Jacinta Price
When elders from the communities of Kununurra, Wyndham and Ceduna travelled to Canberra last week with a video revealing the appalling violence on their streets, they delivered a strong message. Those streets are war zones of drug and alcohol-fuelled assaults and child abuse — and they want it to stop.
The video, supported by West Australian mining businessman Andrew Forrest, proves the desperate need for the cashless debit card system that quarantines 80 per cent of welfare recipients’ payments to limit access to alcohol, drugs and gambling.
These elders are crying out for the lives of the children being assaulted and abused. In one of these communities, 187 children are victims of sexual abuse with 36 men facing 300 charges, and a further 124 are suspects.
I know all too well the deep frustrations these Australian citizens feel as they are desperate to save their people from the crisis being played out day after day in their communities. They have long fought for our political leaders to recognise the need to take the tough — sometimes unpopular but necessary — steps to make meaningful change that will save the lives of Aboriginal children, women and men.
So why do large numbers of our media and our political leaders (including some indigenous ones) fail to respond to such clear evidence of assault, child abuse and violence at the hands of our own people but are prepared to call for a royal commission when the perpetrator is a white person in uniform or when institutionalised racism is perceived to be at play?
A television report on the horrendous treatment of juvenile inmates at Darwin’s Don Dale Youth Detention Centre swiftly sparked a royal commission. Yet footage of an Aboriginal man stomping on an Aboriginal woman and various other vicious acts — which in my view are far more shocking than that of the Don Dale footage — draws criticism by the Greens that the video was simply propaganda for the cashless welfare card. This is not propaganda; it is proof.
We hear regularly that we should be listening to Aboriginal people on the ground to understand the complexities of the problems and to encourage us to find solutions for our horrific circumstances. Well, here is a video created by Aboriginal leaders in conjunction with the wider community, including the police and a mayor, pleading for the implementation of a practical measure to help curb the purchase of alcohol and drugs so the lives of the most marginalised Australians may be improved. No, it is not a magic bullet, but it is a start towards improving the lives of Australian citizens in crisis.
Forrest has been criticised for telling the world that he has been approached by minors willing to sell sex. A 14-year-old I know who roams Alice Springs streets at night regularly witnesses children selling themselves to “old” Aboriginal men for alcohol and cigarettes. We pass such information on to the police, who already know it is happening, yet the authorities responsible for these children tells us they have seen no evidence of it. Just as there was a conspiracy of silence to deny the reality of frontier violence, now there seems to be a conspiracy of silence on the left to deny what is happening openly in our streets.
The evidence of deep crisis has never been so blatant. This trauma is inflicted on our people by substance abuse and violence fuelled by a taxpayer-funded disposable income. However, if a rich white man throws his support behind a group of frustrated and desperate indigenous leaders living with this trauma their plea simply is dismissed as perverse by the politically correct without offering any effective alternative solutions.
The Greens call Forrest paternalistic, yet WA Greens senator Rachel Siewert has the audacity to tell indigenous people how we should think, what our problems are and what we should be doing about it. Siewert and her party chose not to meet the elders who came all the way to Canberra from their remote communities to communicate the real problems.
The Greens reaction is nothing more than the racism of low expectations and egocentric virtue-signalling of those toeing the line of an ideology that is further compounding the crisis. If the video shocked you, good. It should; and what should follow is an appropriate response that recognises the human right of Aboriginal women, children and men to live in safety, free of drug and alcohol-driven violence and sexual abuse. Sacrificing whole generations to violence and abuse does not help the fight against racism. It reinforces it.
Jacinta Nampijinpa Price is an Alice Springs councillor and a research associate at the Centre for Independent Studies.
Possible New Result in Quantum Factorization
-
I’m skeptical about—and not qualified to review—this new result in
factorization with a quantum computer, but if it’s true it’s a theoretical
improvement...
What does Labor stand for? Itself
-
The latest Quarterly Essay has just come out, including my response to Sean
Kelly’s The Good Fight which asks the question: What does Labor stand for?
My s...
Winter wondering
-
[image: A tuxedo cat’s symmetrically marked face stares intensely into the
camera, with her tongue slightly out.]My cat Boomy waits persistently for
more C...
Atlantic: What atheism (supposedly) can’t explain
-
Christopher Beha‘s new book, Why I am Not an Atheist, appears to have
gotten a lot of attention (including a guest essay in the NYT and a long
essay in the...
Y’s Ancestral Wheel
-
The past days ancestors have been part of our conversation at home, as it
is part of Y’s current work at school. We started with the concept of being
named...
This Polycrisis Is Unique
-
*When understood as a wave, the current Everything Bubble is not
sustainable. *
*The problem with predictions based on the past is the analogies we discer...
Garmin watch faces
-
I have recently been using Claude Code (Opus 4.6) to do a variety of
software projects. One was the completion of an ill-fated attempt to create
a custom w...
Standard Model 5: Spin-1/2 Particles
-
One of the simplest quantum systems is a spin-1/2 particle, also known as a
spinor. If we measure the angular momentum of a spin-1/2 particle along any
axi...
weekend read – Economics as if money mattered
-
from Asad Zaman and WEA Pedagogy Blog An archaeology for deprogramming Econ
101—and a practical agenda for heterodox coordination How GFC 2007 Tore
the V...
War, Oil and Empire
-
Michael Hudson and Richard Wolff examine the economic and geopolitical
logic behind the war on Iran. They discuss oil control, the dollar system,
imperia...
Eating The Rich Won’t Fix Climate Change
-
The world’s richest 1% have more purchasing power, and hence more command
over what the economy produces than ordinary people. They can afford a more
ext...
Rethinking climate change
-
by Nicola Scafetta My new book is now published: The Frontier of Climate
Science: Solar Variability, Natural Cycles and Model Uncertainty For more
than t...
Mass surveillance, red lines, and a crazy weekend
-
[These are my own opinions, and not representing OpenAI. Crossposted on
Lesswrong] AI has so many applications, and AI companies have limited
resources and...
A New Explanation for Tariffs and Bombings
-
Because of energy-related shortages that are already being encountered,
national economies are beginning to act like the players in a game of
musical chair...
ANALYSIS OF THE UKRAINE WAR, 2026
-
Bill Kerr Q&A format: What is the situation on the battlefield? The
situation changes everyday. To keep up to date follow some of the links
here to regular...
Processing JSON with Kafka Connect
-
In this post, I’ll share examples of how to process JSON data in a Kafka
Connect pipeline, and explain the schema format that Kafka uses to describe
JSON e...
Mankind versus YHWH-Elohim
-
Your Honor, this Complaint seeks declaratory and equitable relief on the
ground that the Edenic Covenant was structurally defective ab
initio—lacking infor...
Predictions Scorecard, 2026 January 01
-
Nothing is ever as good as it first seems and nothing is ever as bad as it
first seems. — A best memory paraphrase of advice given to me by Vice
Admiral Jo...
No comments:
Post a Comment