The Byron Shire Echo – Issue 35.34 – February 3, 2021

Page 10

Comment

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It’s never the wrong time to do right

dëćşſ ƆIJƖǔōĕƆ ĶƐƆĕōĪ around not governing

Professor Bob Morgan

A game of musical chairs was played last week, where the boss told a few of his people to switch tables that they are not in charge of. Well, that’s how I explained it to a nine year old anyway. It’s no secret that Federal Labor’s front bench reshuffle ruffled feathers last week in the left faction of the party. Alas Labor appears to be lurching towards the right. Within all political parties, members are generally aligned either left or right. In the case of left-aligned Mark Butler MP, he lost his climate and energy portfolio to the right-aligned Chris Bowen. Additionally, leader Anthony Albanese stripped skills portfolio from his rival Tanya Plibersek and gave the unremarkable Richard Marles MP a super portfolio. Still with us? It’s important because the nation needs a disciplined and organised alternative to an emboldened and nauseatingly confident Morrison government for the upcoming election. It’s held by one seat. Just one! Labor MP, Joel Fitzgibbon, from the coal mining area of the NSW Hunter region, appears the biggest threat to the party’s stability and future. His recent Murdoch Daily Tele op-ed tried to demonise climate change action as an ‘obsession’ that is alienating Labor’s voter base. Unlike the sociopaths in the Coalition party who represent the one per cent, Labor’s problem will always be trying to be a party for all seasons. And those seasons are becoming more chaotic and extreme owing to climate change. The ALP Campaign Review 2019, available online, is a great resource into why they lost, how mainstream politics view strategy, and how they treat the public. The review stated that in the election run up, there was a ‘perception that Labor was not supportive of the mining industry… Labor should recognise coal mining will be an Australian industry into the foreseeable future…’. While the local federal Labor MP, Justine Elliot, may believe the science on climate change and push her party to support renewable energy, Labor still takes fossil fuel donations (according to the election donation data dump yesterday). Aside from coal-based Qld communities, Labor also saw 2019 election swings against it in most of southeast Qld. The review stated that groups of voters who swung most strongly against Labor were ‘self-described Christians and economically insecure, low-income voters who do not like or follow politics’. ‘These voters are heavily represented in Queensland’. Yet ‘following politics’ could be argued as a cornerstone of an informed and healthy society. Without it, tyranny takes hold. Tyrants become more emboldened and nauseatingly confident. Corruption gets bigger and trust diminishes further. It’s not a good path anywhere. ‘Following politics’ can also help make more informed choices, which can in turn help elevate voters and their children from a low-income existence. Labor’s challenge is to make politics interesting, explain a better path and keep its messaging clear on climate change. And convince God-bothering Qld bogans. Good luck with that! Hans Lovejoy, editor

A

ustralians have just endured yet another series of debates about the relative merits of January 26 as the appropriate date to mark Australia Day. Aboriginal and other non-Aboriginal supporters who challenge the date are told to ‘get over it’ and to move on. Interestingly, Aboriginal people have never told Australia to get over ANZAC day because we know, and have lived, the pain of loss and the nobility of sacrifice – including the many Aboriginal men and women who enlisted to defend Crown and Country during wars. And they did so without being officially recognised as Australian citizens. As with other colonised countries, Australia has a history mired in fiction and fallacy. The initial and most obvious fiction was the application, by the British at the time of invasion, of the now expunged legal doctrine of terra nullius, which was used to formalise and indeed justify the annexation, by judicial stealth of a country that was the home of Aboriginal peoples for tens of thousands of years. It always was – it always will be. Orbiting this fiction is the perennial annual jousting around the meaning and purpose of ‘Australia Day’ and when it should be celebrated. History tells us that Cook’s voyage to the Southern Seas between 1768 and 1771 had at least two distinct purposes. The voyage started as a journey of scientific discovery, but it later became a joint venture when the British Admiralty (Royal Navy) saw it as an opportunity to discover new navigation routes and trading opportunities that, it was believed, would increase the maritime power and colonial reach of the British Crown. The scientific objective was clear, but the British Admiralty adopted a more clandestine and furtive approach to its instructions, which were in two parts. The first part was open, instructing Cook to observe the transit of Venus to aid navigation. The second part was sealed in an envelope by the British Admiralty, which was to be opened only by Cook. The sealed instructions included the

The Byron Shire Echo Volume 35 #34 February 3, 2021 Established 1986 • 24,000 copies every week

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The Echo acknowledges the people of the Bundjalung nation as the traditional custodians of this land and extends respect to elders past, present and future. Disclaimer: The Echo is committed to providing a voice for our whole community. The views of advertisers, letter writers, and opinion writers are not necessarily those of the owners or staff of this publication.

Phone: 02 6684 1777 Editorial/news: editor@echo.net.au Advertising: adcopy@echo.net.au Office: Village Way, Stuart Street, Mullumbimby NSW 2482 General Manager Simon Haslam Editor Hans Lovejoy Photographer Jeff Dawson Advertising Manager Angela Harris Production Manager Ziggi Browning

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10 The Byron Shire Echo DĕćſƖëſƷ Ǫǽ ǩǧǩǨ

Professor Bob Morgan is a Gumilaroi man from Walgett in western NSW. He is a highly respected and acknowledged Aboriginal educator/researcher who has worked extensively throughout Australia and internationally in the field of Aboriginal knowledge and learning for over forty years. Professor Morgan is currently Chair of the Board of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies, Education and Research (BATSIER) and also serves as Conjoint Professor with the Wollotuka Institute with the University of Newcastle (UON). Professor Morgan was the founding President of the NSW AECG, a Commissioner with the now defunct NSW Education Commission. He is also the inaugural Chair of the Council of the World Indigenous Peoples Conference on Education (WIPCE). directive that Cook was ‘with the Consent of the Natives to take possession of Convenient Situations (Australia) in the Country in the Name of the King of Great Britain’. No consent ‘of the Natives’ was sought, nor was it given, and Cook took possession of the eastern seaboard of Australia on Possession Island, off the coast of North Queensland on August 22, 1770, thus setting in train the events that we still grapple with 251 years later. So, what does January 26 historically mark, and is it the most appropriate day on which to celebrate the ‘founding of the nation’? At its most blunt and honest point, January 26 actually marks the day when the First Fleet of British convict ships arrived at Sydney Cove, and founded the penal colony of NSW, not the Australian nation. I often wonder what the descendants of the convicts who were transported to the penal colony in 1788, and beyond, feel about an event that marks the convict origins of their forebears? Do they also celebrate, or is this also a ‘Day of Mourning’ for them? Scott Morrison, Australia’s transactional Prime Minister, in a recent response to Cricket Australia’s decision to drop the reference to Australia Day for games played on January 26, commented: ‘You know, when those 12 ships turned up in Sydney, it wasn’t a particularly flash day for the people on those vessels either’. Morrison’s puerile attempt to draw moral equivalency between the invasion, historical trauma and

dispossession of Aboriginal peoples with the plight of those on the ships reminds me of the words uttered by Trump following the fatal 2019 Charlottesville white supremacy riots. When asked about the riot, Trump said: ‘You had some very bad people in that group, but you also had people that were very fine people, on both sides’. A similar group of ‘very fine people’ were also involved with the insurrection and failed coup that occurred in Washington on January 6, 2021. Australia is a country of boundless possibilities, but it will never achieve its true destiny until the soft unspoken murmur in the souls of many, if not most, non-Aboriginal Australians is answered through a dignified truth telling and just reconciliation process. This will require something that is sorely missing in our country; mature political, corporate and civic leadership, one that leads our nation to a place where it can acknowledge its past while striving to create a more inclusive, just and equitable nation. The energy and passion of the younger generations, coupled with the wisdom and resilience of older generations, will ensure that the date when Australia, as a nation, is celebrated, it will inevitably change, so that the day is more inclusive, respectful of difference, and truly celebratory for all Australians. The day will be a day dedicated to human dignity and healing rather than division. The dialogue is just and enduring, because there is never a wrong time to do right.

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