A speaker at the event, Gwenda Stanley, told a crowd of more than 500 people that it was time Indigenous Australians were given proper reparations.
***“A million dollars for each black person,” she said.***
“Don’t be fooled by the Uluru statement from the arse. Let’s do reparations before treaty. A million dollars for each black person and than we can talk treaty.”
https://www.news.com.au/national/australia-day-police-vow-crackdown-on-invasion-day-protests-across-the-country/news-story/7c1abc3c0672086fdeae0c57a6f0fc83
**end**
I'm almost certainly going to be downvoted like my name's Ivan Cleary for saying this, but I don't think this is an entirely ridiculous sentiment.
We're talking about compensation for something that only happened three people or so ago (assuming people live to 80 years old).
And if we're being honest, Aboriginal people have only been recognised as Australian citizens since 1967 and were able to vote since the early 60s.
That's close to 200 years living under a system where you were effectively a second class citizen, in addition to a whole heaps of other pretty horrific things like the stolen generations.
It would be a nightmare to administer, a fair chunk would need to come from the Poms and you'd need to think about eligibility and the monetary amounts but I reckon there's a pretty strong case for some kind of reparations.
***“A million dollars for each black person,” she said.***
“Don’t be fooled by the Uluru statement from the arse. Let’s do reparations before treaty. A million dollars for each black person and than we can talk treaty.”
https://www.news.com.au/national/australia-day-police-vow-crackdown-on-invasion-day-protests-across-the-country/news-story/7c1abc3c0672086fdeae0c57a6f0fc83
**end**
I'm almost certainly going to be downvoted like my name's Ivan Cleary for saying this, but I don't think this is an entirely ridiculous sentiment.
We're talking about compensation for something that only happened three people or so ago (assuming people live to 80 years old).
And if we're being honest, Aboriginal people have only been recognised as Australian citizens since 1967 and were able to vote since the early 60s.
That's close to 200 years living under a system where you were effectively a second class citizen, in addition to a whole heaps of other pretty horrific things like the stolen generations.
It would be a nightmare to administer, a fair chunk would need to come from the Poms and you'd need to think about eligibility and the monetary amounts but I reckon there's a pretty strong case for some kind of reparations.