From http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-24/stan-grant's-racism-is-killing-the-australia-dream-speech-viral/7110506 A powerful speech by Indigenous journalist Stan Grant in which he says the "Australian dream is rooted in racism" has gone viral.
Key points:
Grant spoke about the impact of colonisation and discrimination in Sydney
Speech viewed more than 736,000 times on Facebook and 15,000 times on YouTube
Grant addressed an audience in Sydney on the impact of colonisation and discrimination as part of the IQ2 debate series held by The Ethics Centre.
The speech was made last year but was published online just a week before Australia Day. It has resonated with Australians, having been viewed more than 736,000 times on Facebook and 15,000 times on YouTube.
In his address Grant was asked to argue for or against the topic "Racism is destroying the Australian Dream", and said racism was at its heart.
"When we heard those boos, we heard a sound that was very familiar to us ... we heard a howl of humiliation that echoes across two centuries of dispossession, injustice, suffering and survival," Grant said.
"We heard the howl of the Australian dream, and it said to us again, you're not welcome."
He said we sung of the Australian dream, "Australians all let us rejoice for we are young and free".
"My people die young in this country," Grant said.
"We die 10 years younger than the average Australian, and we are far from free. We are fewer than 3 per cent of the Australian population and yet we are 25 per cent — a quarter of those Australians locked up in our prisons.
"And if you're a juvenile it is worse, it is 50 per cent. An Indigenous child is more likely to be locked up in prison than they are to finish high school."
He referenced a famous poem from Dorothea Mackellar, saying his people's rights "were extinguished because we were not here according to British law".
"I love a sunburned country, a land of sweeping plains, of rugged mountain ranges," Grant quoted from the poem My Country.
"It reminds me that my people were killed on those plains. We were shot on those plains, diseases ravaged us on those plains."
Grant has received praise online, including from journalists Hugh Riminton and Fran Kelly, as well as Mike Carlton who described it as a "Martin Luther King moment" on Twitter.
He said he had succeeded in life not because of, but in spite of, the Australian dream.
"My grandfather on my mother's side, who married a white woman, who reached out to Australia, lived on the fringes of town until the police came, put a gun to his head, bulldozed his tin humpy, and ran over the graves of the three children he buried there. That's the Australian dream," Grant said.
"And if the white blood in me was here tonight, my grandmother, she would tell you of how she was turned away from a hospital giving birth to her first child because she was giving birth to the child of a black person.
Help support this long overdue portrait of an important Aboriginal political activist Robbie Thorpe.Aboriginal resistance to the invasion of Australia never ceased. It continues today. Aboriginal political activist Robbie Thorpe stands as part of a long line of Indigenous resistance to invasion. His story is an important one. This short documentary will trace Robbie’s life and politics and explore what is at stake for a First Nations person upon land that was stolen and whose sovereignty never been ceded. Robbie Thorpe has organised challenges to ongoing genocide, colonization and assimilation for over 30 years, working toward indigenous economic and political independence. He has launched High Court legal actions, run a series of high-profile and controversial political and cultural interventions and remains a fierce and unrelenting advocate for his people.
Tuesday 2nd February, 5.30 pm -7.30 pm: Human Existence, Religions and the Digital World. Professor Peter Horsfield, Professor of Communication, RMIT University. Peter Horsfield's research over several decades has focused on the interaction of media and religion. Among other involvements, he was a member of the International Study Commission on Media Religion and Culture. His early study Religious Television: The American Experience was influential in changing perceptions of the extent and influence of the televangelists. His recent book From Jesus to the Internet examines Christianity as a mediated phenomenon. The first systematic survey of the interaction of media and religion in a religious tradition, it shows how Christianity's historical development was shaped by the opportunities and contests of the various media forms used in its practice. His insights into some of Christianity's currently hotly debated issues provide a much-needed historical basis for multi-disciplinary study. Gryphon Gallery, Mezzanine Level, Building 1888, near the Corner of Swanston and Grattan Street, Melbourne. (http://maps.unimelb.edu.au/parkville/building/198). Light refreshments will be provided at the conclusion of the lecture. RSVP: Sue Ennis: wcrpaust@iinet.net.au
Tuesday 9 February, 11.30 am: Rally to stop onshore gas drilling and fracking. Big energy companies have sought to "open up" Victoria to onshore gas drilling and fracking--putting prime farmland and water resources at risk. Regional communities around the state have said "no" to risky unconventional gas extraction. Parliament of Victoria, Spring Street, Melbourne. Organised by Friends of the Earth, Gasfield Free Vic, Yes 2 Renewables.
Thursday 18 February, 6.30 pm – 8 pm: Market Forces Campaign Launch. Market Forces believes that the banks, superannuation funds and governments that have custody of our money should use it to protect not damage our environment. We're planning to make this year massive. Massive campaigns, resulting in massive change. We have climate change commitments from banks that need to be turned into concrete action that moves finance out of fossil fuels. We want to turn divestment from coal, oil and gas from a steady stream to an unstoppable torrent. And of course, we have new dirty coal proposals here in Australia and overseas that need to be stopped in their tracks. Venue: Treasury Room, Imperial Hotel, 2 Bourke St, Melbourne (corner Spring Street). Food provided, drinks at bar prices. Free entry but bookings are essential as places are limited. RSVP here. Market Forces is proud to be an affiliate project of Friends of the Earth Australia and a member of the BankTrack international network, connecting us with passionate campaigners, environmental issue experts and advocates of environmentally sustainable behaviour from the finance sector.
Monday 25 April – Friday 29 April:Living the Peace Testimony with Greg Rolles. Explore the connections between war, militarism, climate change, colonisation of Indigenous peoples, racism – and your own urges to help bring peace. Silver Wattle Quaker Centre, 1063 Lake Road, Bungendore, NSW. Telephone:02 6238 0588
Friday 10 June – Monday 13 June: Indigenous Spirituality and Culture with Karen Kime. Journey into Aboriginal ways of teaching country, kinship and cross-cultural issues in work and community. The workshop will also include examples of other indigenous people. Silver Wattle Quaker Centre, 1063 Lake Road, Bungendore, NSW. Telephone:02 6238 0588
The Australian Catholic University, The Uniting Church Synod of Victoria and Tasmania, The Progressive Christian Network of Victoria Inc., would like to invite you to:
2016 Exclusion and Embrace Conference
Date: 21-23 August 2016
Venue: Jasper Hotel, 489 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne, Australia.
This Conference is a rare opportunity to bring together people interested in understandings of sacred texts, and the experiences of people with disabilities and carers within the context of faith. This multi-faith Australasian Conference has the support of a wide number of organisations including the Jewish Christian Muslim Association (JCMA) and the Faith Communities Council of Victoria (FCCV). The Uniting Church Synod of Victoria and Tasmania is providing the Conference Secretariat.
The Conference will draw on the wisdom of all faiths, and will deepen our understanding of the many aspects of disability and spirituality. We are interested in your experience, research, practice, and ideas and knowledge.
Among the themes explored will be ethics, care, inclusion in faith communities, friendship, discrimination, love, justice, liberation.
In Australia, and abroad, an increasing number of people are actively exploring the intersection of disability and spirituality. An excellent Conference program will present perspectives across the faith spectrum, with opportunities for dialogue and formation of new networks. It will have appeal to people who live with disability, families and carers, academics and practitioners (volunteers and staff).
Two esteemed speakers will be keynoters at our Conference: Prof Hans Reinders is Chair of Ethics at VU University, Holland, and editor of the journal Religion and Disability. Rev Bill Gaventa is Director of the Summer Institute of Theology and Disability and President-elect of the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD). We are also delighted that an Australian cast of presenters is increasingly coming on board: Prof David Tacey an interdisciplinary scholar who is widely published for his knowledge of Australian spirituality. Other presenters include Lorna Hallahan, Sheik Isse Musse, Melinda Jones and Diana Cousens (see website Speakers tab for details).
There will also be an exhibition of artworks that reflect people’s experience of disability and spirituality, as it relates to the conference theme.
The Conference is also seeking Abstracts within these three streams, as they relate to disability and spirituality.
(i) Supports in faith communities/service providers
(ii) Sacred texts/theological understandings of disability
(iii) Theological Education/Research.
Please go to Call for Presentations for details of Abstract Details and Guidelines. Abstracts need to be submitted by 10 April, 2016. Presentations may include formal papers, posters, personal stories, poetry, or other approaches.
We invite presentations which address aspects and experiences as they relate to spirituality and disability. Themes include liberation, education, bioethics, reconciliation, sexuality, pastoral care, inclusion, love, theological interpretations. All presenters must be registered for the event by 15 July, 2016.
Other sponsors and endorsers include Spiritual Health Victoria, Spiritual Care Australia, Christian Blind Mission, Victorian Council of Churches, Progressive Christian Network Victoria, Australian Catholic University and the University of Divinity.
As part of the Conference, we are also launching and displaying an Art Exhibition, depicting the conference themes. Andy Calder, Conference Convenor
Further Information: Ann Byrne The Uniting Church Synod of Victoria and Tasmania Email: ann.byrne@victas.uca.org.au
Phone: (03) 9251 5404
Endorsed by: Faith Communities Council of Victoria, Jewish Christian Muslim Association of Australia, Victorian Council of Churches, Spiritual Care Australia, Spiritual Health Victoria and University of Divinity.
Dear Networkers, thought you should be aware of John Menadue and his blog. Please don't take this as a complete endorsement of his thoughts. Menadue is a distinguished Australian. For those of you too young to have known of Menadue in his prime, please go here.
Photographer Jennie Groom Courtesy Museum of Australian Democracy Canberra
Fairness, Opportunity and Security Policy Series
edited by Michael Keating and John Menadue
With many other people, we are concerned about the policy vacuum and the poor level of public debate on important policy issues. We began a series of articles on policy issues in Pearls and Irritations on 11 May. They have now all been posted There are forty-eight articles on fifteen policy areas from over thirty contributors. They are linked to the contributor's name below. To all the contributors - thank you very much for your excellent contributions. John Menadue, Michael Keating.
Introduction.
Ken Henry'I can't recall a poorer quality public debate, on almost any issue, that we have had in recent times in Australia.
Democratic Renewal
Vested interests
John Menadue 2, 'Vested interests represent a growing and serious corruption of good governance and the development of sound public policy'
Loss of trust
John Menadue 1, 'We need political reform to restore trust in our political system and our polity.'
Post majoritarian future.
Ian Marsh 1, 'It is unlikely that in the future Australian governments will have majorities in both Houses of Parliament'.
Policy-making practice.
Ian Marsh 2'Policy reform may well depend on reforms to our political system and decision-making processes.'
The Role of Government
The importance of values.
John Menadue, 'Good government must be based on some broadly shared values that inspire and enthuse us.'
Role and responsibilities of government.
Michael Keating, 'In practice, the responsibilities of governments have changed little in the last thirty years.'
Role of government.
Ian McAuley'Australia and similar democracies have done well because economic progress has been a shared venture between the public and private sectors.'
Foreign Policy
Security in the region.
Stephen Fitzgerald, It is remarkable the headway that Paul Keating and Gareth Evans made in South East Asia ... in gaining acceptance of Australia as one of them.
Australian foreign policy
Cavan Hogue, 'Countries don't have friends, only interests. The United States has always remained fiercely independent and has followed policies which served its own interests first.'
An independent Australian foreign policy.
Richard Butler, By relying on 'great and powerful friends' we have acted in a way that has 'substantially compromised our independence and ... exposed ourselves to increasing danger.'
What Australia's foreign policy should look like.
Stuart Harris, We must be careful to avoid 'a choice between the political and economic relationships with the US and China.'
Australia, the US and Asia.
John McCarthy.In recent years Australia has superceded both Japan and the UK as the US states' closest ally.
The Economy
Fixing the budget
Michael Keating 1'Why did the government break so many promises and insist that the unfair cuts in last year's budget were absolutely necessary and any opposition was irresponsible.', Michael Keating 2The government's plan to balance the budget by 2019-20 is not credible.
Taxation Reform
Michael Keating'Encouraging unrealistic expectations of tax cuts is only making government more difficult.'
Federalism
Michael Keating'It will be necessary to continue the reforms started by the Hawke-Keating governments.' John MenadueOne way to make federalism work better in the health field is to pool commonwealth and state funding and agree to a state-wide health plan in any state that is prepared to cooperation with the commonwealth.'
Job Creation and Participation
Michael KeatingThe best way to promote greater employment participation is to increase the investment in education and training to improve the skill base and employability of disadvantaged people.
Productivity
Michael KeatingMost important is the creation of an innovative culture through support of research and development, education and skills and forging close links between the scientific community and industry.
Innovation
David CharlesWe need to transform from an economy largely driven by investments in minerals and energy sectors to one which has a wider spread of investment drivers
Transport and Infrastructure
Michael Keating and Luke FraserAustralia is racking up very substantial debts to finance unreformed infrastructure. It is scandalous that infrastructure investment escapes proper scrutiny.
Retirement incomes
A fair, effective and sustainable system.
Andrew PodgerWe need to draw together all the threads of the retirement system, particularly pensions and superannuation.
Immigration Part 1, Australia has a great record in nation-building, but benefits achieved cannot be taken for granted in the future.
Refugees Part 2, How to move from toxic politics to a humanitarian policy once again.
Settlement Part 3Successful nation-building needs good settlement services to support new arrivals.
Communications and the Arts
Cultural Identity,
Julianne ShultzWe need to draw together diverse cultural policies to better serve our national interests.
Arts.
Kim WilliamsWe have eroded the standards and reduced public support for the arts.
Media Regulation in Internet World
Terry FlewHow media convergence is driving the need for regulatory and policy change.
NBN.
Rob NichollsWe need to target the NBN rollout in line with what our major trading partners are doing,
Security - internal and Human Rights
Spencer ZifcakWe have draconian laws but inadequate safeguards. Susan RyanWe need to revive the Human Rights Act campaign of the 1980s. Security, both military and soft power Michael WesleyThe politicalisation of security is endangering our safety.
Health
Part 1 Problems
John MenadueMedicare was established forty years ago but is badly in need of reform.
Part 2 Health reform opponents
John Menadue'Health ministers may be in office, but seldom in power.'
Part 3 Health solutions
John MenadueWe need new processes, governance and policy directions to move us beyond the present inertia, incrementalism and tinkering.
Health workforce
Jim McGintyThe emphasis in health workforce reform must mainly be about nurses.
Co-payments
Jennifer DoggettWe have amongst the highest out-of-pocket health costs in the world. They lack logic, efficiency and equity.
Development of our human capital in the fields of education, science, innovation, research and development
Knowledge capital.
Glenn WithersKnowledge capital is the real wealth of nations.
Eroding Human capital.
Chris BonnorDifferences in education outcomes seem to be increasingly the result of differences in wealth, income, power or possessions. Let's hear it for Gonski and My School.
Environment and climate change
Ross GarnautIt would be wise to supplement an emissions trading scheme linked to Europe with regulatory action. Peter CosierWays to combine a productive economy with a healthy environment. Jon StanfordWill Australia rise to the occasion in the Climate Change Conference in Paris in December. Brendan MackeyReconfiguring human endeavour to live within the boundaries of a finite planet.
Indigenous affairs
Fred Chaney, Some progress in closing the gap - but a long way to go. Michael GraceyIndigenous health requires a much broader definition of the meaning of 'health' and local empowerment.
Welfare and families
Andrew PodgerCurrent arrangements are overly complicated, inconsistent and incoherent, overly means-tested, and without sufficient regard for efficiency.
Inequality and the Australian welfare system
Andrew Podger, Peter Whiteford, In reducing inequality, priority should be given to promoting employment and addressing specific weaknesses in the tax and transfer system. Ian McAuleyThe conservative slogan that a 'rising tide lifts all boats' is not working for the poor.
National Reform Series 2016 | Civil Society Australia
Reforming NDIS: Fulfilling the Promise to Revolutionise Disability Services Online Consultation - First Round
What Do You Think?
The following are proposals for reform of NDIS. There are twelve (12) proposals on which comments are invited. We want to know what you think.
Our aim is to receive comments on these proposals so that refined proposals can be presented to the National Conference on Reforming NDIS on 21 March 2016.
People with disabilities, families, friends, support organisations, community groups, services and policy makers are invited to contribute to this people-driven process to ensure NDIS delivers on the promise to Revolutionise Disability Services. Reforming NDIS: Process and Timeline 1 December 2015 - 31 January 2016 Submit your suggestions and proposals for reform of NDIS. Proposals will be distributed for consideration. Participants consider various suggestions and proposals for reform, and offer their assessments.
1 February - 21 March 2016
Refinement of proposals based on participant feedback.
21 March 2016
Conference participants assess proposals for NDIS Reform and establish mechanisms for driving an ongoing reform process.CLICK HERE to register your interest in participating in this process.
CLICK HERE to submit a suggestion or proposal for reform. CLICK HERE to read the submitted proposals and add your comments.
CLICK HERE to register for the 21 March 2016 national conference.
Two Days in March 2016This process and conference on Monday 21 March 2016 forms part of a series of reform events hosted by Civil Society Australia in 2016. Two events will be held in March 2016. Participants may attend one or both of these as they wish. Monday 21 March 2016 Reforming NDIS Revolutionising Disability Services Tuesday 22 March 2016 Reforming Mental Health Breaking the Inertia in Reform CLICK HEREfor further information. Venue
The Angliss Conference Centre is located in the Melbourne CBD, on the corner of LaTrobe and King Streets, on the fifth floor. It is close to train and tram services. Flagstaff railway station is one block away in LaTrobe St, and Southern Cross station is three blocks away in Spencer St. Trams 23, 24, 30, 34, and City Circle run along LaTrobe Street.
There are numerous accommodation options close by, to suit all budgets.
Start and Finish Times
Both events begin at 9.15am, finishing at 5.00pm.
CLICK HEREto register for one or both of these events.
Further Information CLICK HEREfor further information. CLICK HEREfor Civil Society Australia website.
Over the past year, violent extremist movements have made striking gains. ISIS has consolidated its control over a large swathe of Iraq and Syria, attracting tens of thousands of foreigners, establishing footholds elsewhere, and perpetrating terrorist attacks across the Middle East and beyond. Al Qaeda affiliates from Yemen to Syria to Somalia appear resilient, in some cases stronger than ever. ISIS’s attacks in the West – apparently centrally coordinated in the case of Paris, perpetrated by lone wolves elsewhere – have upped pressure on Western powers to respond more forcefully. Certainly, more can be done to fight ISIS. But any action must be informed by an accurate diagnosis of the problem and must avoid the mistakes of the past.
With that in mind, here are 10 dos and don’ts to consider in the fight against ISIS. They all draw on Crisis Group’s years of experience covering violent extremist movements and the conflicts they feed off, as well as lessons of the past decade and a half’s counterterrorism operations.
1. Don’t overstate the threat
ISIS has demonstrated its potency and may grow stronger yet, but in the past, extremists have tended to profit from their enemies’ overreaction. Their terrorism is often designed to provoke indiscriminate retaliatory violence, which benefits them further. ISIS itself is at least in part a product of the US post-9/11 “war on terror”. Leaders in the US and Europe need to better control the narrative, avoid feeding fear, make sure they do not alienate whole communities, and use force sensibly.
2. Don’t expect bombs to defeat ISIS
Bombs can disrupt training camps, weaken command structures and kill leaders. But no insurgent movement with roots in communities has ever been defeated by bombs alone. Bombers will run out of targets and ISIS will still control some parts of Iraq and Syria. Bombs alone may even prove counterproductive: civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure can push communities into the arms of extremists. In the end, the battle needs to take place on the ground.
3. Don’t expect ‘allies’ to wage that ground war
ISIS may be a common enemy, but few of its enemies in the region think it is the number one priority. The Saudis care more about weakening Iran. Turkey’s main priorities in Syria are ousting Assad and containing Kurdish separatism. The Syrian Kurds care about Kurdistan. Iran – along with the Assad regime and, for the time being, Russia – cares more about maintaining Assad in power than defeating ISIS. Not only have regional politics and escalating competition between states been a major boon for ISIS, they also complicate efforts to defeat it.
4. Don’t overlook the political and socioeconomic roots of ISIS by focusing exclusively on their religious propaganda
True, of the many components that comprise ISIS, some are religious and pursue theologically inspired goals. And true, decades of Gulf-sponsored religious messaging, via schools or satellite television, helped shape a climate receptive to this message. But in the Middle East, where ISIS and other jihadist groups have won the support or acquiescence of communities under their control, that is not so much because of their ideology and more because of the things they provide, particularly for people living in conflict zones or failed states. ISIS has won support thanks largely to the violence Sunni Muslims suffered at the hands of regimes in Baghdad and Damascus, and by appealing to the disenfranchised and alienated within the Sunni community. And in Europe, the new generation of radicalized youth are lured to ISIS online, rather than through mosques, often with little reference to religion and more to violence or fraternity. To paraphrase the French scholar Olivier Roy: we are witnessing the Islamization of radicalism rather than the radicalization of Islam.
5. Do not pursue policies to defeat ISIS that aggravate the conditions that enabled its rise
The increasing influence of ISIS, like that of other extremist groups, is in large part a product of violence and decades of repressive rule. Partnering with repressive governments – particularly those that class all their enemies as violent extremists – in efforts to stamp out the threat risks pushing ever greater numbers of their enemies into the extremist camp. And focusing exclusively on extremism can lead governments to overlook other sources of fragility that can create the crises and state collapse that extremists profit from.
6. Understand the multi-dimensional nature of the problem
ISIS and other extremist groups are symptoms of the dramatic upheaval in the Middle East. The Sunni/Shia divide and a deep sense of Sunni victimization are, of course, prime factors in its rise. Less known, but perhaps no less important, are parallel changes within Sunni communities themselves, particularly in Iraq, where ISIS has been able to play on a series of social fault lines – urban, rural, tribal, generational, and so forth – to give others, not only extremists, a significant stake in their continued rule.
7. Be cautious with the use of force
Military force often needs to be part of fighting extremism, but it is always a blunt instrument, particularly when the main goal – as it must be – is winning over communities. Only forces that can establish positive local relations should participate in an assault – with ISIS, this probably rules out Shia fighting in Sunni-majority areas and Kurdish forces in Arab lands, and it mandates caution even with local Sunni forces that may have scores to settle. If the suffering of a local community cannot be minimized, it is probably preferable to avoid attempting to retake territory and instead contain ISIS within its current boundaries. Taking the territory and losing the people again – as in the aftermath of both the US invasion of Iraq and the Arab Spring – is worse than leaving ISIS in control.
8. Work openly to end the polarization destroying the Middle East and do not unwittingly become part of it
The escalating competition between Gulf monarchies, particularly Saudi Arabia and Iran – now reflected in an Iran/Russia axis pitted against a Saudi-led coalition – is as grave a threat to stability as ISIS, driving the region’s sectarian currents and opening space for extremism. Western leaders should acknowledge this publicly and redouble efforts to dampen tensions. Unless they do that, no strategy to defeat ISIS will be effective.
9. Reinvigorate efforts to end existing wars and prevent others erupting – particularly by responding sensibly to terrorism
Without reasonably inclusive peace deals in Syria, Yemen and Libya, tackling groups linked to ISIS or Al Qaeda will be impossible – they have flourished as more powerful armed actors fight each other. Given that any crisis in the Muslim world is likely to assume an extremist dimension, even in countries with little history of Salafi-jihadism, preventing conflicts is critical to protecting the states still standing. This requires bolstering those in danger, as in the Sahel, where criminal trafficking of all sorts easily morphs into political violence. Since jihadi groups like ISIS take root only after a long period of unaddressed local grievances, botched security responses and festering low-intensity conflicts, a focus on prevention and early action is key. Once a local conflict has radicalized, it acquires a transnational dimension that renders a political solution much more difficult to reach. Thus even as the Middle East burns, Europe should not forget the Sahel and sub-Saharan Africa.
10. In developed countries, prioritize domestic security over military engagement in the Middle East
Military engagement can potentially weaken the appeal and influence of jihadist movements by demonstrating that they are not invincible. But their eventual eradication will be the result of political processes that may take decades. In the meantime, preventing a destructive fragmentation of multicultural Western societies should be the priority. This requires a clear rejection of the politics of fear, but such rejection will be possible only if terrorism is contained, which requires sufficient resources to protect the home front.