I always said that if the Voice succeeded, history showed that we could expect many of its recommendations to immediately be the subject of dispute within the wider indigenous community, leaving governments back to square one as to who they should listen to, given there was no obligation to adhere to Voice recommendations.
There is no better evidence for this pessimistic take than the sudden rush to endorse everything Palestine, so to speak, by the more radical side of aboriginal politics, and the counter-position put up by Marcia Langton:
The "scumbag" Tanuki refers to is Langton, who had written in The Australian:
“As an Indigenous Australian, I can have little effect in stopping these horrors but it is necessary to be clear about a few matters.
“Blak sovereignty” advocates have entwined two extraordinary propositions – one that is simply untrue and one that is a moral outrage.
First, they claim that “Indigenous Australians feel solidarity with Palestinians”.
This is false; it is the view of a tiny few, if put in those words. Most of us are aware of the complexity and that there is very little comparable in our respective situations, other than our humanity.
Second, they refuse to condemn Hamas. I am aghast and embarrassed. They do not speak for me. I fear and loathe the possibility of further loss of life in this terrible crisis. I fear also that our multicultural society is being torn apart by people deluded about terrorism who have used their protests as a cover for anti-Semitism.
Our Jewish and Palestinian communities deserve respect and compassion. I do not support the violence we have seen in Australia recently as a result of this conflict.
Hamas are terrorists; Palestinian Islamic Jihad are terrorists. The slogan “Not all Palestinians are Hamas” denies the fact that innocent Palestinians are being used as human shields by these terrorists.
No legitimate Aboriginal leader will permit our movement to be associated with terrorists. I can state confidently, based on my long experience in Aboriginal communities and giving advice to Indigenous corporations, that the majority Aboriginal view is a repulsion of terrorism.”
Adam Briggs, the guy so into aboriginal culture he makes a living by copying American black culture, thinks that we shouldn't be using this against them. Because, I don't know, it's unfair to point to the poisonous, fractious nature of indigenous politics amongst the indigenous?:
I agree with these views, by the way:
Oh, and in other "everything's OK in the world of aboriginal academia" tweets:
Blackwell is an academic (well, research fellow) at ANU who has been on The Drum and other ABC shows, apparently, and is Lefty enough to tweet a lot of support for Palestine. But he obviously can't stand Watego.
The thing you can't click on in that tweet:
Soon, the grounds of Queensland University of Technology
(QUT) will be a place where Indigenous wisdom and culture is not only
celebrated but given an intellectual space that supports Blak excellence
and innovation.
The new faculty of
Indigenous Knowledges and Culture, announced this week, will operate as a
stand-alone faculty, and will deliver academic programs and conduct
research.
Angela Barney-Leitch, QUT’s Deputy Vice-Chancellor of
Indigenous Australians, told NITV that the faculty could influence other
academic disciplines.
"The idea for us
now is to focus on what Indigenous knowledges means to all knowledge ...
and what difference it can make to the way people at university look at
different issues and problems and perspectives."
"It's going to be like a whole Indigenous learning community.
"And
the good thing about it for all Australians is that non-Indigenous
students and staff can be part of this, but it will be Indigenous led."
Professor Chelsea Watego, QUT’s Carumba Institute Executive
Director, told NITV that the new faculty will be a welcoming space that
counters colonial narratives.
"The
faculty that we will offer here will provide so many of our Blackfullas
with the kind of environment to know who they are [and] where they come
from.
"[The faculty] contests the violent
knowledges that have been produced about us, that hold systems
accountable, that should be doing better."
I have posted about Watego before. She seems very talented at losing court cases against her previous university, and the police, at least. But here are her hopes for her new faculty:
"I think the exciting part for non-Indigenous students is when
your foreground Indigenous intellectual sovereignty there's a whole
different understanding of humanity," she said.
"What I find when we bring non-Indigenous people along into
these spaces, is the way in which they reconfigure themselves in their
relationship to this place, but also what it means to be human."
By centring Indigenous knowledges, Professor Watego believes other areas of learning can see radical change.
"And
there are really exciting transformative possibilities of rethinking
what it means to be a nurse, an engineer, or teacher or social worker
when you operate on an Indigenous terms of reference."
"You
can't even begin to imagine the transformative possibilities and that's
the exciting thing for me to be a part of, is to see what our people
can do with the tools of these institutions for the betterment of our
mob," she said.
It used to be said that any new University in Australia would open a law school because it was relatively cheap and sounded semi-prestigious to have such a discipline in your faculty.
It now seems that any University will seek "social conscience" credit points by giving well paid jobs to female academics fully into the self serving piffle that the academic Left creates for itself.
I suspect that QUT will find appointing Watego as its head will all end in tears, actually.
Update: I see Margaret Sheil, the VC and President of QUT, was in the news recently for another reason:
- QUT has doubled down on its plans to remove references to "merit" from its hiring policy
- Vice-chancellor Margaret Sheil says supposedly merit-based recruitments are actually swayed by unconscious bias
- Professor Sheil says the new approach will factor in gender, ethnicity, and departmental balance
Wow. Seems a sound way to undermine a university's reputation, if you ask me!
What is her background? A little to my surprise, it's in chemistry and the sciences.
Hmmm.