Another stolen generation: how Australia still wrecks Aboriginal families
64 replies, posted
wow another zionist article bullshit which it's very well known for it's biased against whites. :(
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[QUOTE=JB10169;44321130]wow another zionist article bullshit which it's very well known for it's biased against whites. :([/QUOTE]
oh dog
[QUOTE=JB10169;44321130]wow another zionist article bullshit which it's very well known for it's biased against whites. :([/QUOTE]
Oh poor white man how persecuted you have been
[QUOTE=Psychokitten;44314146]What the fuck, I thought Australia was cool.[/QUOTE]
We're pretty hot actually
[QUOTE=Antdawg;44314889]The problem is the disproportionate amount of children that are indigenous who are being taken away. A third of the children that are taken away are from a demographic that only represents 3% of the population. We really need to fix that.[/QUOTE]
The problem probably stems from how aboriginals tend to live. A lot of aboriginal communities tend to try and live traditionally or semi traditionally, which doesn't really work so well with social services.
You get into a catch-22 really. You ignore the way aboriginals live in order protect their culture and let them bring their children up in the conditions they are used to - you are failing the kids as a state.
YOu step in to improve their living conditions across the board - you're destroying their way of life
You let them live as they see fit, but apply the same measure on them as far as social services go - you're targeting them more than any other group.
[QUOTE=Sobotnik;44320547]I'm not too fond of that sort of thing in history. I preferred history of Europe as a whole instead of focusing on Britain. Even then, I've enjoyed learning the history of non-European countries such as China, Russia, and the United States too.
I'd prefer it if children were largely taught more about the wider history of the world instead of their tiny corner of the world.
Native history is difficult considering we know as much of what we know about it is through archaeology or whatever somebody wrote about it at the time. I quite like reading about the Incan Empire too, it's my favorite of the American civilizations.[/QUOTE]
Even if you do that, you'll get different looks at history. For instance the period of a large expansion of a country. In what remains of the country today, this will often be seen and spoken about as a golden age. In others, which ended up the control of it, it might be referred as a darker period of history.
Even if you tried to aproach it neutrally, it will be coloured, in part because you're also teaching about the artistic works from the time or those that were inspired by the time.
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