@wtigers said:@stryker said:I do not see a major problem with this policy Happy, your mate will get a TPV which entitles him to:
- The right to work and have access to job matching by Centrelink
- Special Benefit,
- Rent Assistance,
- Family Tax Benefit,
- Child Care Benefit,
- Medicare,
- Early Health Assessment and Intervention Program,
- Torture and trauma counselling,
- English as a Second Language classes.
I fail to see how they are being treated as 'second class citizens'.
"STOP THE BOATS" is a simplistic slogan but if you look behind the rhetoric, there are 4 underlying issues that desperately need adressing and action:
1) The loss of human life due to these boats overturning and people drowning out at sea.
2) The people smugglers are organised crime and at the moment are helping to dictate who enters this country.
3) Our Navy and coast gaurd agencies are being run off their feet keeping up with the arrivals. This is costing us billions.
4) The fact that the 'boaties' are attempting to sneak into the country is very concerning. We have legitimate channells set aside for genuine applicants who are running from terrible situations. They are being held back because those with money are jumping the queue.
There is no doubt that we should help those less fortunate and allow them to live a better life. However when you have people sneaking in after destroying their papers - well we have no idea who they are.
Are they genuine?
Are they involved with organised crime and are sent here to establish new chapters?
Are they criminals running from the law?
Are they a part of terrorist cells?
Come in the front door and we will help you. Sneak in and you'll end up worse off for your troubles.
As for your final anecdote, I suspect that if that ever eventuates, the greater majority of countries would help us but we would have to abide by their specific policies and rightly so.
It is obvious that you care about helping people less fortunate, however Tony Abbot's portrayal of Boat People as 'illegal' creates a sense of fear and racism - not everyone who supports the policy is as open minded and supportive of those less fortunate than them. Look at the Cronulla Riots, they were started because Australians believed that they were superior to other races - the only ones that deserved to be here. The portrayal of these people as illegal just creates a public mindset in which White Australians believe they're the only ones deserving of this country. These people are treated a second class citizens by our people AND our government. Boat people have not once been terrorists attempting to attack Australia, and I'm sure that many of them would take the official passages were they available but not every immigrant has that opportunity.
There's no doubt in anyone's minds that the boats need to stop - people are drowning and it's unacceptable. But creating a sense of fear and exclusion towards migrants is not the way to go. We need to be offering more support to them in their attempts to arrive in Australia rather than turning them away. Which is what Abbott and co. Don't appear to want to do.
And we can house more migrants - countries in northern Africa (Tunisia possibly? I a not great at geography) take more migrants than us and they have a far more unstable economy and greater percentage of people under the poverty line.
_Posted using RoarFEED 2013_
In every country you have protectionist, racist elements who want to close borders and marginalise minorities, this happens everywhere and not just in Australia. I think you'd probably find most Australians (read: not just European Australians,) have no issue with immigration largely as we're all more or less sons and daughters of immigrants. Not all of us listen to Alan Jones and Ray Hadley.
Personally I support "stop the boats" policies for reasons already mentioned by Stryker, and I hate the publicity that boat people get as they only make up a small fraction of the "illegal" immigration in this country (the true illegal immigrants come by plane holiday or working visa and just don't go home,) and those people seem to cop the brunt of the vilification. It's reprehensible that people can profit off the back of misery and suffering and not even guarantee safe passage here. The plight of these people is tragic when they aren't even assured of making it here alive. If that's not desperation I don't know what is…