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kaz3g

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  1. http://www.dumpaday.com/index.php/2011/07/55-very-funny-pictures/funny22/ Peanut butter anyone?
  2. Sceptic asked "Compared to what? How does the percentage of aboriginals per capita compare to elsewhere in the world?" There are Aboriginal people in many parts of the world including NZ, much of North and South America, parts of Asia and even Europe. Dispossession and the breakdown of culture have created similar issues in each of those locations in proportion to the extent of the loss. Almost all of those other countries ended up with treaties and consequent greater recognition and respect. Why are we different? Kaz
  3. I think the problem is that you have identified those offenders by their Aboriginality rather than by their medical, socio-economic circumstances. It's often easy to see black and white but harder to see how the person lives. Victoria has only a small population of Aboriginal people compared to other States and they tend to live in relatively concentrated groups (as have many of our more recent arrivals from Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Africa. I find very little difference between the issues affecting a number of the Aboriginal people in my area and the many non-Aboriginal people in similar circumstances. It doesn't take Einstein to see its not colour that is the problem, it's common factors starting with lack of opportunity, flowing through lack of self esteem, and ending up down the gutter of despair that result in anti-social behaviour. Kaz
  4. One track...I'm not going to debate this issue with you because I see no value in it. But I have lived and worked in the north-west of your state and in the NT. I live and work amongst the members of the largest Aboriginal community in Victoria now. All I can say is that your "experience" doesn't match mine. Kaz
  5. Yes, and ice is the worst from a number of aspects...its extreme addictiveness, the brain damage repeated exposure does, and the violent behaviour of those affected. Incarceration costs are actually about $120k pa but that doesn't cover the infrastructure, just the keepers. It costs the equivalent of about two months incarceration to put an addicted person through a course of rehabilitation instead. The only thing imprisoning addicts does is harden their attitude and add to their repertoire of skills as thieves, burglars and bashers. Those few that aren't addicted before they enter will,almost certainly be when they get out. Prison does not treat the addiction. The concept of rehab in prison is a sad joke. Prison should be the place where only the worst of society are held. The rest, the majority, should have their medical and mental health issues treated in the community under supervision while they work off their debt to society. Why do we have women serving 12 months or more because they sold a small quantity of drugs to pay for their own addiction when their men are released into the community for bashing them in their homes? Kaz
  6. Very true Bex, but it doesn't mean that the plight of the most vulnerable should be a subject for humour. As I said above, it's not to excuse the offending, rather it's about changing the environment in which there is a predisposition to offending and perhaps spending some of the billions being invested in new prisons on the changes would be a good first start. In Victoria, the former government was "tough on crime" and we now see the number of women being imprisoned rising at more than 10% per year. The rates for men are almost as high. So the answer was to spend $760m on a new gaol and this is rapidly blowing out to that Billion figure without the additions to other gaols, the double and triple bunking of inmates and the installation of who knows how many shipping container-accomm units at the rural prisons like the one near where I live. We, the taxpayers, should be asking what's wrong in our society that we spend more on a new prison than on a new hospital or half a dozen schools or we will go broke fencing off that section of society like they have in California. Kaz
  7. He looked at the history of the early occupation of Australia by the British through his eyes more than 210 years after the event. Robert Studley Forrest Hughes AO was an Australian-born art critic, writer, and producer of television documentaries. His best seller The Fatal Shore is a study of the British penal colonies and early history of Australia. Born: July 28, 1938, Sydney Died: August 6, 2012, The Bronx, New York City, New York, United States Children: Danton Hughes Siblings: Tom Hughes, Geoffrey Hughes, Constance Crisp Spouse: Doris Downes (m. 2001–2012), Victoria Hughes (m. 1981–1996), Danne Patricia Emerson (m. 1967–1981) Perhaps it's time non-Indigenous Australians tried to look at it through Indigenous eyes, especially in this NAIDOC week? It's not about "changing the sentencing laws" for a particular group but it is about refining those laws to achieve more effective outcomes for the benefit of all Australian society. All the evidence continues to point to the fact that three quarters of those in gaol would do better if offered real programs of education, training, apprenticeships, cognitive behavioural therapy, sporting opportunities, cultural and language development to foster some self-esteem rather than being placed in crook college where they learn to be bigger and better offenders. But hey, what would I know? Kaz
  8. He was there, of course. Kaz
  9. Report calls for overhaul of the way Indigenous people are sentenced
  10. And some people commit crimes because they are seriously unwell, destitute, homeless, come from a dysfunctional family or have never known anything different and they need to survive. They have no sense of optimism for the future because they can see no future. They are the second or third generation in perpetual unemployment. They don't have the resources, physical or intellectual, to change their circumstances and they therefore have no self-esteem whatsoever. Instead they are easily coerced into using alcohol and drugs to make themselves "feel better" and they end up in the criminal justice system But that's ok...goal will fix it for them...if they don't suicide first. The rates of suicidality amongst our Indigenous communities is nothing short of shameful. The perpetuation of paternalistic and demeaning measures to control their incomes will never teach them to manage their own affairs. The rate at which their children are removed from families is now worse than it was 70 years ago when the "Stolen generation" first became a matter for concern. Although they make up only 3% of the population they make up nearly a quarter of all people incarcerated. Family violence is rampant amongst our indigenous people but wasn't known 200 years ago. Two hundred years ago they had extremely strict rule to manage their interactions- transgressions were punished by tribal spearing and beatings. Their society was very structured and everyone knew their places and occupied them. They didn't drink alcohol. No-one stole because they were the ultimate socialists and shared everything. Their was no incest or child abuse. There were no hard drugs. They had a highly complex culture and their own language, but probably spoke 3 or 4 other languages fluently (many still do). And they could survive in country that caused the white folk who followed them to perish frequently. They suffered horrendous massacres at the hands of these "civilised" whites, contracted horrible diseases because of their contact with them, and lost their lands to them. This is not an excuse for the offending that occurs today but perhaps, just perhaps, some of them think it's fair to "collect the rent" now and then? I don't think the current situation is cause for Laughter. Kaz Google "Conniston massacre" on Wikipedia and have a white read about one of the many "interactions" that our European ancestors inflicted on them
  11. My Aunty Ruby's last name was Mortis and I had an uncle John Frost. Kaz
  12. Well, age is a funny thing. While I can be pretty definite about not being involved with any C***** up, I am probably guilty of being confused about which "Flying" posted Kaz
  13. I think Vizzie has a lot of problems getting an Internet connection from the remote area in which he and she live. Probably sent several posts that didn't make it to the forum. Kaz
  14. More reliable and cheaper to repair than a bloody BMW! Kaz
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