Humble servant of the Nation

Australia Day debate hides the failure of practical reconciliation

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THIS is Australia and we can’t even have a public holiday celebrating national identity and consciousness without having a blue.

The debate has largely been led by buffoons looking for a quick, easy path to self-aggrandisement, a ticket to ride on the media ferris wheel. The advocacy of the ‘no change ever’ side of the donnybrook is about as bold as calling for a reduction of the road toll or a collective finger wagging about the dangers of injecting black tar heroin.

Today an Australian businessman, Ben Beath entered the fray from the other side, offering his staff extra holidays if they chose to work on Australia Day by way of protest.

Alan Tudge, a member of the Turnbull cabinet, said the initiative would make “no difference” to advancing the interests of Aboriginal Australians.

Never a truer word was said. Yes, Australia Day and what it stands for is deeply mired in symbolism. Any change to the date which incidentally would require the consent of the states, territories and federal government — a laughably implausible prospect at the best of times — would require leap-frogging from one particular piece of symbolism to another.

There is no real appetite for change in the wider community. I get it. A lot of people don’t like change. Politically, it’s a perfectly reasonable position to hold but the fact remains if we disliked change to the point of never actually changing we’d still be single cell amoeba, swimming around in the primordial slime and eating with our arses.

Regardless of your view, the simple fact is Australia did not become a nation on January 26, 1788. Rather southeastern Australia became a penal colony. The British loved Australia so much they turned it into a prison. In 1788, this vast expanse of land was useful only to the British as a point on the compass to offload some of the working class trash who had muddied the shoes of the aristocracy by drunkenly cavorting about and stealing their hankies.

In doing so a process of dispossession, murder, humiliation, disease and exploitation of the world’s longest surviving civilisation commenced. If you can’t at least feel empathy towards indigenous Australians, let me point you towards the Hare checklist for psychopathy.

But in the great public holiday barney, this matters little. As the Minister for Human Services said this morning, there is no practical benefit to the lives of indigenous Australians in changing the date celebrating nationhood.

The larger problem is the Turnbull government has shirked practical reconciliation, too.

The day after Malcolm Turnbull rolled Tony Abbott, I wrote an article in praise of the fallen PM and mentioned a speech he made in Sydney in support of constitutional recognition of indigenous Australians. For mine, it was Abbott’s finest moment as PM. It was a rousing speech and at the time, one felt that recognition by constitutional means was a short step away. Abbott may not have been able to enunciate a clear pathway to it but he had made clear his conviction.

While it was a long way off the media radar at the time, the events of September 2015 effectively replaced a prime minister who cared deeply about indigenous Australians with one who, if he cares at all, keeps it well hidden.

The Uluru Statement from the Heart rejected mere symbolism. Rather than the vexed business of specific constitutional recognition of indigenous people as the First Australians, what was proposed was the creation of an advisory body to the federal parliament with the existence of the body reflected in the constitution. The Uluru statement was referred to the government for consideration in June last year.

In August at the Garma Festival, a celebration of indigenous culture in Arnhem Land, Malcolm Turnbull said little of substance and spoke in homilies. The Uluru Council’s proposal was being considered by cabinet. It would need bipartisan support, the PM said. His speech would prove to be a deferral of a rejection, a rejection the PM dare not make in front of a mainly indigenous audience.

Two months later cabinet did reject the Uluru Council’s proposal and handed down its reasons by press release. The rationale was that the advisory body amounted to a “third house of parliament.” This was a falsehood and it is difficult to imagine it was not a deliberate act of political chicanery.

Here is what Noel Pearson, a member of the Uluru Council, wrote two days later:

“The body would be external: a voice to parliament, not in parliament. It would have no veto power. No voting rights. It would not change the make-up of the houses. It would be an advisory body like the one that exists now, except constitutionally guaranteed in terms of existence and hopefully more effective.”

The press release also questioned the outcome of a referendum on the creation of the advisory body. It had the bipartisan support Turnbull had insisted was a prerequisite in his Garma speech but this apparently was not enough.

Peering through the political fog of the decision, the Turnbull government took the easy way out as it almost always does. It was too hard, too risky.

A decade or more of work by some of Australia’s best indigenous thinkers combined with some of the nation’s finest legal minds was flushed into the political sewer. The Turnbull government has set back the recognition process by at least another ten years.

“I think Malcolm Turnbull has broken the First Nations’ hearts of this country, expressed in the Uluru Statement from the Heart,” Mr Pearson said.

“He accused John Howard of doing that in 1999 and he has done the same thing in relation to recognition of indigenous Australians.”

In the space of six months the Turnbull government’s has won the quinella — a rejection of a symbolic form of recognition, by way of a change of date to Australia Day, but what is much worse is the weak abandonment of a more practical and enduring form of recognition.

What we are left with is the morally indefensible position that might is right and white people know what is best for the First Australians.

Tell me, Mr Tudge, how is the government advancing the interests of Aboriginal Australians?

This article was originally published in The Australian on 19 January 2018.

232 Comments

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    The State Library of NSW with a fabulous collection of stories from the 1st Fleet in 1788, Mr Insider.
    http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/stories/terra-australis-australia/tales-first-fleet

  • Huger Unson says:

    I’m watching ‘Newsfront’ again, 40 min in and they’ve just received their mission to get out there and record what ordinary Aussies are up to. An hour to go, but I’ve got an uneasy feeling that indigenous Australians won’t get much of a mention. Am I correct, Jack?
    Also reading Steven Bach’s ‘Final Cut’. Interesting to reflect on the role of Hollywood in telling the history of USA.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      You can never have too many vox pops, HU. it’s the ABC’s bread and butter.

      • Huger Unson says:

        Yes, but Heather Ewart’s back-to-the-50s ‘Back Roads’ can’t hold a candle to Griff Rhys Jones or Michael Portillo. Something to do with our history being a little thin, and those unwritten signs at the 60 signs welcoming newcomers to “just fit in … or else”. Pumpkin scones, or Devonshire tea? Koalas this way.
        Maybe Ewart has a stash of secret recordings saying what small-town Aussies *really* think.

  • jack says:

    My recollection of the history of Aus Day was that it really took off after the bicentennial in 1988.

    I want to Sydney for that weekend and it was a wonderful celebration of Australia, and to be frank, Australia has a great deal to celebrate and we shouldn’t shy away from it.

    I don’t believe that January 26 is the only day on which we can do that, but post 88 it will take a decent alternative and a bit work on the promotion front to make a change, and in the meantime I am happy to gather a few friends on January 26 for a drink and dinner and a toast to my homeland, because let’s face it, if you are an Aussie you’ve been hit in the arse with a rainbow.

    BTW, when i read the arguments about Invasion Day being bad for Australia, I find myself asking, just what do you think would have happened if the British had not sent Phillip and his ships to found a penal colony?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Possibly French, maybe Dutch colony but ultimately it would have reverted to the Brits.

      • Dwight says:

        Ask the Indonesians about the Dutch. The Spaniards and Portuguese were probably the worst, but the Germans in Africa were close.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          The Spaniards win the gold medal. No contest.

        • Penny says:

          Agree with all that Dwight, the Moroccans aren’t all that enamoured with the French either, despite providing solid infrastructure and teaching them to make fabulous wine, bread and cheese. Downside of the French colonization of Morocco and Algeria is the bureaucratic processes from registering your car, getting a drivers license and the French education system.

          • jack says:

            the french did leave good food behind.

            plenty of bad too, nearly all the stupid marxist revolutionaries from french indo-china studied in france in the 1960s.

            we can thank the Sorbonne for the Khmer Rouge.

            Now that is leaving a cultural heritage.

          • Trivalve says:

            But great bread, even in Gabon

        • jack says:

          yes, it was inevitable that a large continent apparently sparsely populated by a largely hunter-gatherer pre-industrial people was going to run up against modernity in the form of some colonialists or other.

          they weren’t to know that large portions of the inland were as dry as a pommy’s bath towel so someone would have been tempted. Aboriginal life as it was pre January 1778 was not going to continue to the present day.

          they and we were fortunate that it was the British, as at least they left the building blocks that our Aussie forebears could shape into such a stable and successful country.

          While much much better colonialists than the alternatives they were far from perfect, but we can acknowledge error and mistakes without losing sight of our luck.

          • Trivalve says:

            That’s a good comment. And also the fact that the Dutch and les frogs didn’t get a foothold allowed us to maintain the linguistic and cultural homogeneity that we enjoy (and we do).

            And without being unkind, show me another large plot of land on the face of the Earth that hasn’t been invaded or taken over at least once. Look at Europe and the Middle East FFS…

          • Penny says:

            It is a good comment I agree. As for French Indo-China, we’re off to Vietnam this weekend Jack, I shall practice what little French I have, partake of the lovely food and pay for everything with US dollars, the recommended currency I have been told by the hotel and the tour operator. I guess in those instances you don’t mention the war….

          • Penny says:

            TV….Thailand is very proud to state that they have never been invaded. But when you look at their landscape and poor agriculture, I have to say I’m not surprised….

            • Trivalve says:

              I’ll check on that one Penny, given the amount of shenannigans that’s gone down next door in Burmyanmar.

              Didn’t meet anyoe speaking french in Vietnam. Suggest check with Gryzly on the money changing.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    “1788” by the astute David Hill, Mr Insider a fabulous book on the 1st Fleet and it exposes just how brutal it was to be on the 1st Fleet. Am sure many have read it and I am on a 2nd reading after some years. Many great books on early Australia, “The Fatal Shore” by Robert Hughes another.
    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5978890-1788

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    A very good article, JTI, and one that has provoked predictable responses on the other side of the wall. Perhaps January 26 should be New South Wales Day. After all, several states were settled by Europeans entirely without reference to NSW. For example, South Australia has Proclamation Day on 28 December. Not one of those people on January 26 would have regarded themselves as Australian, and very, very few wanted to be here.

    Perhaps it would be wise of me to not get drawn in to discussing Indigenous Australians. But I am not going to be wise. Nothing infuriates me as much as the trite ‘We are all equal now’ argument. Tell that to Christine, an Aboriginal girl in my class at school in Port Augusta, who was sat at the back of the class and ignored. For the entire year. Or the husband of a work colleague who married a man with Tamil ancestry, and a PhD in one of the harder science disciplines. When we visited a certain country town together he was either ignored or insulted, not because he is Indian but because the locals thought he was Aboriginal.

    As it happens, my wife has spent the last 18 months working for an authority with particular responsibilities to Aboriginal people. I won’t mention the name because I don’t want my wife to be identified. She has told me of the Aboriginal woman she works with who always has two seats to herself on the bus, even if it is crowded. People won’t sit next to her because she is Aboriginal. Or the young Aboriginal man she works with who is always neatly dressed and always polite, but at transport stops gets asked by the police who he is, what he is doing and where he is going. But nobody else ever gets asked these questions.

    The thing is, it is easy for me as an Anglo Australian to say that race is irrelevant. And the children of our close Chinese friends will certainly say that race is almost irrelevant. But if you are Aboriginal, race is central to your life, because it is what you experience every day. ‘We are all equal now’. Sure.

    Yes, change the day. January 26 will never be Australia Day for me.

  • Uncle Quentin says:

    I looked at the Hare Checklist – one person personified it. Donald Trump, he got 17 of them
    The twenty traits assessed by the PCL-R score are:
    glib and superficial charm
    grandiose (exaggeratedly high) estimation of self
    need for stimulation
    pathological lying
    cunning and manipulativeness
    lack of remorse or guilt
    shallow affect (superficial emotional responsiveness)
    callousness and lack of empathy
    parasitic lifestyle
    poor behavioral controls
    sexual promiscuity
    early behavior problems
    lack of realistic long-term goals
    impulsivity
    irresponsibility
    failure to accept responsibility for own actions
    many short-term marital relationships
    juvenile delinquency
    revocation of conditional release
    criminal versatility

    • Kathy says:

      Sugarplum this blog is about australia day the last blog was about trump. You are a full one behind petal.

    • Razor says:

      You’re kidding UQ ain’t ya? I’ll give you a tip people, both lovers and haters, are over the constant trump bashing. Their over the constant bleating by the left about him. Didn’t you read the last blog?

      • Uncle Quentin says:

        I just looked at the checklist and drew the obvious conclusions.
        PS you can never have to much trump bashing.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        I’m with Uncle Quentin here. Too much Trump bashing is ever enough. While giving you a point for futile effort Razor, some sort of sad appeal for relief a considerations for your feelings? hahahahahah, I’m telling ya ya dreaming.
        Diddums HTF, get used to it.

  • Mack the Knife says:

    Something not mentioned is that 26th January is also the date in 1949 when the Australian Citizenship Act became law and the people became citizens of Australia, not British subjects as before.

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Hence that’s why dirty Rolf Harris can live in the UK Mack and not be deported to Australia as he is a British Citizen, he beat the Australian Citizenship Act of 1949 by many years. Cheers

  • Boadicea says:

    JB
    re your childish, facetious response to my comment re Nick Kyrgios.
    No, i am not inclined to send a card and roses. But if i got the chance to meet him I would certainly shake his hand and congratulate him.
    I know you are totally absorbed with GW issues and have probably never heard of Kyrgios.
    Six months ago the kid was a superbrat, scorned by most of the tennis fraternity and seemingly hellbent on self destruction despite the efforts of Tennis Australia and others to help him – he is certainly the most talented player on the circuit.
    Lleyton Hewitt still believed in him though and took him under his wing and seems to have worked wonders.
    Today Kyrgios has the respect of most. He had Rod Laver arena at his feet the other night and his victory speech was gracious and mature.He is in the process of setting up a foundation to help brighten the lives of sick and disadvantaged kids – goes and plays tennis with them – and cares about them. He will not speak about it himself as he does not want the public to perceive it as self promotion.
    I was one of his critics once – but not any more.
    I hope he stays on this new path

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Go on, send him a card and a box of chocolates. You know you want to.

      • Boadicea says:

        Yeah, sure

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Go on. I’m sure you were a great influence on his rehabilitation and he’s bound to be very wary of exhibiting behaviour that might cop him another serve (tennis pun) from you.
          It will mean a lot to him if you bung him a card and some chockies.
          If you’re too bashful to take the kudos, just sign the card “from the tennis fraternity.”

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Great piece.
    Jan 26 is the date of European occupation or invasion as some will have it. No issues for me there, it is a fact. The beginning of what would be a terrible disaster for much of the indigenous population. And it still is for a great many today. Whatever anyones opinion on how indigenous people should or shouldn’t feel about it , that for some has to be “in your face.”

    • Penny says:

      Agreed it is a great piece. As a proud descendant of three First Fleeters, one indeed was transported for the crime of stealing a hanky from the gentry, I too believe that we should move Australia Day to the day Australia became a nation. The British thought nothing then of the Great Southern Land then and I’m not sure they think much differently now.
      However the main point of JTI’s article is Turnbull’s rejection of the Uluru Statement and all that it said about the man. He has absolutely no idea about issues that face the indigenous people and nor does he care. I think it was Tony Abbott (or was it John Howard?) declared once that Australia was unoccupied before British occupation, he did make an effort to talk to Indigenous leaders. Malcolm Turnbull on his numerous visits to the Northern Territory has never bothered.
      As for traditional Australia Day celebrations, we’ll be cooking a New Zealand leg of lamb and washing it down with a nice bottle of Chilean wine..

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Yes indeed South Eastern Australia became a Penal Colony for the British Convicts on January 26th 1788 as you write in your column, Mr Insider, but everything must have a start somewhere and January 26th every year is Australia Day for me. I doubt strongly Captain Phillip would have envisaged the debate about the day going on now when he plonked the Flag in and made his august utterances. For all we know he may have been in a hurry to get the Barby going and rip off the top of a bottle of warm Pommy Beer? Seriously I say let the day stand as it is and if any change at all is to be made maybe a slight alteration to read “Australian Day” which then covers ALL Australians. “Australia Day” was good enough for Richie Benaud. Aussie Aussie Oi Oi Oi. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NM39rnBTBFc

    • Jack The Insider says:

      The date signifies our version of Columbus Day. We could call it European Settlement Day. I have no problem with that but Australia Day is and should be a celebration of nationhood. It’s not as if there are no precedents. Former European colonies around the world celebrate nationhood on a day on the calendar where self-government and political independence was determined. July 4 in the US for example. The Commonwealth of Australia came into being on 1 January 1901. The first federal parliament sat on May 9, 1901 in Melbourne. These are important dates when Australia could be said to become a nation. January 26 is an anniversary of European settlement. I have no problem with people celebrating that but the date itself has nothing to do with Australian nationhood.

      • Milton says:

        We’d be hard pressed to find a day that yells out oz nationhood.
        And in similar vein, the indigenous people in this land are not as one. This is our greatest condescension and why we have spent millions on a drunken, failed dystopia. No doubt well intentioned but it was the left progressive Whitlam that paved the way for the horrific abuse that the abc and sbs and Jean and dismal and john O’Hagan prefer to keep mum about. They love blacks (?) when it is good to go. Otherwise, hypocrisy, condescension and paternalism.
        Anywho, is that two fra…….?

        • Jack The Insider says:

          You’ve essentially made my point. Do yourself a little research and see what happened in Melbourne when parliament first sat on May 9, 1901. The streets of the CBD were full of people, Bourke and Spring Streets were brought to a standstill as people gathered to see the first federal MPs arrive. There was a real sense of excitement about it. The nation was being born before their eyes. It is worth remembering that in 1901, almost three quarters of the Australian population were native born. Australia adopted many British political institutions (and we should be grateful for their influence) but reworked them to suit our own circumstances, a ‘washminster’ system with two elected houses of parliament, the doctrine of separation of powers in place, universal suffrage, compulsory voting, fair and strong property laws. Our political institutions are stronger, fairer, more just than almost anywhere else on the planet. These institutions are constantly being traduced these days because I believe Australians are essentially clueless as to what they mean and how they came into being. Why is Arthur Phillip (a good and fair man, don’t get me wrong but an Englishman sent to establish a British penal colony) so well known but if you asked Australians to name our own founding fathers, you’d be hard pressed to get one name? We have got this arse about. In American terms it would be like making Columbus Day a more significant holiday than their July 4 Independence Day celebrations. Commemorate European settlement by all means but my view is a genuine celebration of nationhood should take place. There is so much to celebrate and so much of it is simply not known compared to the story of the establishment of colonial Australia. If we want to celebrate what makes this nation truly great, we should know and understand what took place and when, how and by whom.

          • Huger Unson says:

            Jack, I see your appeal to ‘celebrate’, but therein lies the conflict nailed by Milton. Without expanding on the outcomes of a gigantic piss-up, maybe we ought to be looking at two other factors at play.
            One, your “essentially clueless”.
            Two, our own instincts on empathy.
            On the first, the nation hasn’t grown up on a diet of contorted history, Godliness and military displays. Each wave of newcomers pushes anything based on flag-waving further into the too-hard domain. An attempt to create something that relies on denial finds itself brought up short on hypocrisy.
            On empathy in general (in a “global” sense), there are two currents, one of them driving to cancel the positive. I mean repellent “cultural” practices. And in that we are right back to English law in 1788.

            • Jack The Insider says:

              There’ll always be arguments on the Constitution and what it is and what it might have been, HU, but it is a much more positive story than a piece of land established as a prison.

        • Penny says:

          I think you should include more than just Dismayed, JB and John O’Hagan who love the “blacks” Milton. There are very real issues that nobody has solutions for. I’d also like to see the research you’ve done that Whitlam was to blame for all the wrongs that have been done to our indigenous people. Drunken failed dystopia……hmmm.

          • jack says:

            that’s right Penny there are problems, especially with remote communities, that nobody has found a solution for and quite a few very good people have tried very hard and spent a lot of money and still not made much difference.

            and that goes back to the Whitlam years.

          • Trivalve says:

            From what I have seen, which is more than a little and a lot less than a lot, the problems are horrendous and possibly unsolvable. But you simply can’t have that attitude.

            • Milton says:

              I agree, Trivalve and with what Jack HK says. We could ask whose problem is it – local, state, federal? A whitefella or blackefella problem? A policing, family services problem? Do we condone or ignore problems in remote indigenous communities that we wouldn’t elsewhere? Are our prisons overly represented with the indigenous because of an expedient and unfair police and judiciary? I have few if any answers or solutions except to say that it is a national problem that needs to be dealt with across the board and without discrimination. Moreover, repairing cultural and generational damage will not happen overnight and must begin with small steps. As Wissendorf said earlier “over reach” is doomed to failure.

          • jack says:

            well, we certainly can’t give up, but experience teaches that money and good intentions don’t make much difference, we need some better ideas.

            I don’t know enough about the Uluru statement, have they proposed another ATSIC?

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Milton. So everything was hunky dory until Whitlam and the left came along. You are a dill. An ideological ignorant dill.

      • Dwight says:

        Well, to be pedantic, Independence was passed on July 2nd, then they had to draft the Declaration itself, and then it was publicly read on the 4th.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Not sure that matters very much. What does matter is that Americans understand their own history and the broad circumstances in which their nation became self governing.

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