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The Voice

Dutton with Price turns up in The Alice talking about child abuse (they learnt the facts from business owners and shop keepers) after doing the below...


https://www.snaicc.org.au/media-release-statement-from-snaicc-ceo-cather...Mr Dutton was a member of the Abbott Cabinet that cut more than $500 million in funding to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander services, and another nearly $80 million to Aboriginal and Child Family Centres that supported our vulnerable children and families.
 
Semantics and bulldust. I have/have had indigenous clients that work in this area of indigenous affairs and concur with Price et al
 
Maybe because they commit more crimes ?
I have yet to see you make a point that holds water.
Your lack of use of data, minimal knowledge of law, negligible understanding of the Voice, and ignorance of ATSI culture seem to contribute.

So let's just rebut your above point quickly:

As to incarceration, @DaveTrade got it right:
"... the role of the criminal justice system cannot be disentangled from the complex dynamics that sustain and compound high levels of disadvantage and in turn contribute directly to high levels of victimisation in many ATSI communities."​
Rederob : "You clearly haven't read The Stolen Generations Report"
I read it a long time ago, and it was actually titled "Bringing Them Home".
Many non-ATSI think that separation did a fair bit of good. But there is zero evidence that was the case:
"A national random survey of Indigenous people conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics in 1994 allows us to compare further the life circumstances of the people who had been separated as children against those of the people raised by their families and communities. It shows no significant difference between the two groups with respect to their educational achievement."​
and:
"Similarly, the group removed from their families in childhood was no more likely to be employed. In fact there is a slight and non-significant tendency for this group to be less likely to be employed than people who were not removed."​
They were also less healthy:

And suffered significant sexual abuse from non-ATSI peoples:
A notable factor contributing to poor outcomes across the board was lack of ATSI involvement in almost every issue.
 
Sounds reasonable -

The parliamentary committee should require that the Solicitor-General provide advice on whether the voice could delay decisions of the public service. The committee should insist that the government publish the Solicitor-General’s advice. His advice should address questions such as:
  • Would the proposed amendment provide the voice with a constitutional entitlement to receive notice that a public servant was considering making an administrative decision relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples?
  • Would the voice then have a constitutional entitlement to receive sufficient information from the public servant about the proposed decision so as to make an informed representation?
  • What would constitute due consideration of any representation received?
  • Would the public service have a constitutional duty to inform the voice that they were about to consider some policy options for submission to their minister when those options could relate to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples? And how early in the development of policy options would the constitutional duty to inform come into play?
  • To what extent, if any, could any constitutional duty on the public service be modified or negated by parliament enacting a law under the proposed amendment which is specified to be “subject to this Constitution”?
  • Which Commonwealth agencies would be required to receive representations from the voice?
  • What limits might parliament set on representations from the voice to “independent statutory offices and agencies – such as the Reserve Bank, as well as a wide array of other agencies including, to name a few, Centrelink, the Great Barrier Marine Park Authority and the Ombudsman” (the Davis/Appleby list)?
 
"A notable factor contributing to poor outcomes across the board was lack of ATSI involvement in almost every issue."

I was undecided but am for it now for this reason.
The Aboriginals don't get a day and lack trust.
People say why should they be treated specially, but other groups are treated specially e.g. the mining lobby, Gina Rhienhardt (I could tell you some stories) , the Pharmacy Guild and many more.

So I think its not a bad thing that Indigenous people, living in the bush, far away from the powers get the right to have a say on actions directly affecting them.
 

I don't think that it is about being "treated specially", the current discussion is more about whether there is unforeseen consequences caused by poor wording; "What is currently proposed is the creation of a constitutional entity (the voice) with a constitutional entitlement to make representations to public servants. The unresolved issue is determining the extent of the constitutional duty of public servants to ensure that the voice is adequately apprised of information to know that a decision is contemplated and of information sufficient to allow the voice to make a reasoned representation."
 
Yes, which is why I made the post earlier. The High Court will act on the intention of the Referendum which is why, when it was introduced to Parliament a number of QCs wrote the words the minister said to make it crystal clear. The Government only has to listen, not act and is allowed to set up the Voice through Parliament in any format they wish.

That is why the high esteemed highly trained ex Liberal Shadow Attorney General Julian Leesor resigned from his position to actively support the Voice to his career detriment.

I think people have to have some faith that the Government and its advisers know what they are doing and question the counter campaign from what I see is generally poorly argued by non legal people based on the need to oppose change.
 

Why won’t the government publish the Solicitor-General’s advice?
 
Why won’t the government publish the Solicitor-General’s advice?
This post is from Sky News so there will be some trust from the fringe dwellers(not that you are) Worth a read.
 
He "expects" the advice will be made public.

He can do it himself tomorrow if he wants, and release it ALL, unedited and unredacted.
 

“Expects”? Well when the information is released we can all make an informed decision, rather than using the opinions of others that suit our preconceptions.
 
He "expects" the advice will be made public.

He can do it himself tomorrow if he wants, and release it ALL, unedited and unredacted.

They potentially have a problem here, don't they. And why is he leaving it to the AG, if at all?

Also, in that piece from Sky he doesn't actually say he 'expects' it to be released. He says "make that position clear", which doesn't mean what he precisely advised in writing, but leaves it open.

 
"... the role of the criminal justice system cannot be disentangled from the complex dynamics that sustain and compound high levels of disadvantage and in turn contribute directly to high levels of victimisation in many ATSI communities."

Twice as much is spent on Aboriginal welfare per person than for the rest of society so the term 'disadvantage" is debatable.
 
Defn: disadvantaged
Not having the standard of living conditions, education, health, etc. that most people have.

That's two own goals in a row.
Disadvantage is not unique to Aboriginal people. Charities like Salvos and Smith family are overwhelmed these days and most of their clients are not Aboriginal.

As you did not deny my previous claim about welfare payments I have to assume you cannot disprove it.

That's an own goal to you.

If people of any race take their welfare payments and use it for alcohol, drugs or gambling then blame someone else, then that's a problem for them to solve.
 
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