Print Friendly, PDF & Email

On Saturday over 60% of Australians realised that the people are parliament’s masters, not their servants.

I spoke this morning on the Voice to Parliament, which saw 5 electorates with the largest Aboriginal population give the Voice a thrashing.

Australia voted NO to feelings-based governance and NO to elevating one group within our community over all others based only on skin colour.

Saturday’s result clearly shows Canberra no longer represents the values and beliefs of everyday Australians.

It’s time to dismantle the Canberra Aboriginal industry and deliver resources directly to those in need in the bush. It’s time to stop preventing rural Aboriginals from owning their own homes and running their own affairs.

I asked the Senate a simple question – who is better to run Aboriginal affairs: the Canberra Aboriginal industry, or local Government who are in the bush ready to build the roads, utilities and community facilities rural Aboriginals need so badly.

Transcript

Last Saturday was the day Australians said no — no to feelings based governance, no to elevating one group within our community over another based only on race, no to a Prime Minister whose chief skill is to cry on cue and no to spending more tax dollars than our taxpayers can afford. Australians are already struggling with a cost-of-living crisis as a result of shoddy governance from successive parliaments. People need to keep more of their own money, not less. On Saturday, Australians realised that the people are the parliament’s masters, not its servants. The irony is that the referendum did give Aboriginals a voice, and they used it. The five electorates with the largest Aboriginal population gave the Voice a thrashing. It was a result which clearly shows that Canberra no longer represents the values and beliefs of everyday Australians.

For those in this place who supported racism and apartheid—and you were the majority—now is the time to ask yourself, ‘What the hell was I thinking?’ How could you think it was okay to take a system that has failed Aboriginal people for 120 years and embed, enshrine and perpetuate that system in the Constitution? We don’t need to preserve a broken system that’s failed Aboriginals in the bush; we need to tear it down. It’s time to dismantle the Canberra Aboriginal industry and deliver resources directly to those in need in the bush. It’s time to stop preventing rural Aboriginals from owning their own homes and running their own affairs. It’s time for city grifters in comfortable offices thousands of kilometres from rural communities to stop keeping money meant for the bush—money that’s used to fund their own empires and line their own pockets. Enough money goes into the funnel to make things right. A drip comes out the bottom. It’s time to turn the damn funnel around.

Today is a new day for Australia’s Aboriginals. Let’s not waste the chance to ask ourselves this question: who’s best to run Australian Aboriginal affairs? Is it Canberra bureaucrats and the Aboriginal industry, or is it best run from local communities and councils right there in the bush, ready to get cracking on housing, roads, power and community facilities?

8 replies
  1. john
    john says:

    Well worded. It is time they listen to use the people.
    Now with this out of the way time to exit the WHO and the UN.
    And we would also like to know which are the puppets are in contact or members of the WEF.
    Time to expose them.

  2. Bill
    Bill says:

    Splash the cash Albo must go. He has just squandered $400,000,000 & counting on his pet project that backfired.
    How has this helped the homeless, starving, sick, education, police, nurses, firefighters, ambo’s, cost of living & so much more. Any other CEO would be fired, well almost unless your name is Allan Joyce.
    TIME TO GO ALBO.

    • Wes Taylor
      Wes Taylor says:

      $33.4 bilion dolary 3300 bodies advising govt – step 1 establish where the money goes step 2 ask each body what they do and how much they receive step 3 ask those bodies to justify their worth in writing with a time line ?

  3. Estelle Tucker
    Estelle Tucker says:

    Thank you for this information. l agree with other comments we need to tackle WEF, UN and WHO as they are destroying our voice for freedom. We need to act now before it’s too late. Media are also a problem as they all play the same tune.

  4. Estelle Tucker
    Estelle Tucker says:

    Thank you for this information. l agree with other comments we need to tackle WEF, UN and WHO as they are destroying our voice for freedom. We need to act now before it’s too late. Media are also a problem as they all play the same tune.

Comments are closed.