Australia Two Nations
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About this ebook
George Bush killed more Americans than Osama Laden killed. Americans paid heavy price for the mass hysteria and melancholia in the aftermath of September 2001. Berlin wall was brought down but walls were erected in Iraq and Palestine.
Celibacy should be abandoned by Catholic priests to prevent child sex abuse. Vatican needs transparency and external scrutiny to prevent further mafia style scandals.
Abortion and euthanasia should be taken out of religious contexts respecting the individuals choice
Kanaga Segaram
The author lived in and travelled to several countries. He explains how Australia can reconcile with the Aboriginals in the divided country than postponing for the sake of parliament elections and playing to gallery. He has reflected on the aftermath of September 2001 and it’s relevance to Australia. Additionally, his observations from few other countries are presented. Any criticism is much appreciated by the author. When you read the book, please remember what Voltaire said: "I do not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."
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Australia Two Nations - Kanaga Segaram
Copyright © 2014 by Kanaga Segaram.
ISBN: Softcover 978-1-4828-9377-9
eBook 978-1-4828-9376-2
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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Contents
Acknowledgement
Preface
Australia: Two Nations
Around The World
Australian Politics
Olympics 2012
Royals
Interesting Cases
Islamophobia
Christianity
Islam And Women
Sydney Police
Alcohol, The Social And Legal Drug
Corby
September 2001
Irony
Refugees
The Author
Medical College
Home Town
Ethical Or Not?
Municipal Council
Seychelles
Again In Capital
New Zealand
Brunei Darussalam
What Is Special About Australia?
To My Mother
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
My wife and son never agreed with my radical thoughts, verbosity or eccentric actions. However, their support in my life is very precious. I appreciate and thank Trafford publishing and Ms Sydney Felicio for their excellent work at short notice.
PREFACE
The author lived in and travelled to several countries. He explains how Australia can reconcile with the Aboriginals in the divided country than postponing for the sake of parliament elections and playing to the gallery. He has reflected on the aftermath of September 2001 and it’s relevance to Australia. Additionally, his observations from few other countries are presented. Any criticism is much appreciated by the author. When you read the book, please remember what Voltaire said: I do not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
The world has diversified opinions and standards. There may be criticisms about opinion, words or actions. The person who was called terrorist, Nelson Mandela became a modern day Gandhi. The time and place spectrum can modify the value at different points. No human is perfect. The theme of this narrative is that of Voltaire’s. The civilized and matured world appreciates difference of opinions and actions. Sometimes people agree to disagree but respect others’ views. In a democratic and pluralist society multiple ideas are promoted though finally all agree to the majority values. National security and patriotism should not suppress freedom of expression. A maverick or group with a radical view is termed as terrorist or hate campaigner or unpatriotic or even worse, claimed to have incited violence and disharmony. These are tactics to stifle freedom of expression by dictators and monarchs who want to be leader for life without any dissent or challenge. Soviet Union, Russia, China, Zimbabwe, Egypt under Mubarak and Libya under Gadhafi are examples of this category. Even Hitler used Nationalism and patriotism for his ambition. In the modern democratic society, freedom of expression is highly valued. Any criticism through Facebook page and Twitter is very much appreciated.
AUSTRALIA: TWO NATIONS
"I do not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend to
the death your right to say it."—Voltaire
Pope Benedict proved he was stupid within months of his elevation as Pope. He quoted from somewhere that Islam was violent. The idiotic utterance sparked world wide condemnation and protests by Muslims. Former Malaysian prime minister Dr Mahathir Mohammad aptly retorted that Christians and Pope were suffering from selective amnesia. Christian leaders forced conversion of others with burning at the stake, drowning, and suffocation. British lieutenant hung the Kandyan prisoners in Ceylon without any trial. Governor Brownrigg’s aide-de-camp killed nineteen and took some prisoners. Seven of them were later executed without any trial and the bodies were hung up. During the reign of Queen Mary I in England Many Protestant Christians were tortured and killed. Catholics were put to death during the reign of Queen Elizabeth (Ravi Fernando, Sunday Times, 13 January, 2013). In the name of God, during First Crusade in 1099 when Jerusalem was captured, the Muslim population, every living thing, men, women, children, dogs and cats were slaughtered. In 1187, when Saladin captured Jerusalem, Christendom feared that Saladin would slaughter the Christians with sword and women would be raped. Fortunately, Saladin was magnanimous to display the superiority of his faith and civilization to barbarian Europe. On the other hand during third Crusade Richard Lion Heart massacred 3,000 of Saladin’s men whom he had taken prisoners (Dr Kumar David of Christian origin, Hong Kong).
"The so-called New Nations such as the USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand created by European colonialism bulldozed indigenous nations, their sovereignty and territoriality in those lands" (‘Multicultural’ deception of New Nations, TamilNet, 31 January, 2013). A Canadian aboriginal chief Spence said Indigenous peoples have lived well below the poverty line in Canada that considered one of the wealthiest in the world
(Fight for rights not over, Island, 25 January, 2013). The atrocities committed by convicts and their descendants on Aboriginals in Australia were described by then prime minister Paul Keating in 1992 Recognition that it was we who did the dispossessing. We took the traditional lands and smashed the traditional way of life. We brought the diseases and the alcohol. We committed the murders. We took the children from their mothers. We practised discrimination and exclusion
(The Australian, 10 December, 2012). Four years after the Bicentennial of white settlement which was not something worth celebrating for most Aboriginal Australians, Keating delivered a powerful, deeply moving and beautifully phrased speech. All the atrocities and crimes committed by settlers against Aboriginals were recognized. But that was only a lip service. Both major parties’ megaphone policy changed nothing on ground for Aboriginals. Both parties have to play for the gallery that is majority Australians to win any election. They cannot afford to grant any concession to the natives. In 1998 there was an apology. Again in 2008 there was another apology. Still nothing changed for the aboriginals in their day to day life. In Bundaberg, Queensland lies an awful secret hidden under an old cane plantation outside the sugar city. In an unmarked grave the bodies of 29 South Sea Islanders are buried. Between 1863 and 1904 thousands of Pacific islanders were shipped in to toil in the state’s cane fields and fruit plantations. Many descendants claim they were kidnapped by European slave traders and forced into a life of bondage. Though, officially they were called indentured labourers, actually they were slaves (AAP, 7 December, 2012). Northern Territory chief minister of Aboriginal origin, Adam Giles has proposed a plan for the adoption of Aboriginal children if they are victims of extreme neglect (ABC, Updated May 14, 2013). But some Aboriginal advocates say they are reminded of Stolen Generation. They say ‘the loss of culture, land and language has a long-term impact on the social and emotional wellbeing of those children’. Deputy chief minister admitted that only one Indigenous child has been adopted in the Territory in the last decade.
In May 2012, police broke up an Aboriginal tent embassy in Brisbane. Nearly 80 protesters were dragged away from their makeshift camp by police. That was a symbolic gesture by First Nation’s people or Aboriginals or sons of the soils or natives (ABC, 16 May, 2012). The Aboriginals or natives did not have any signed agreement or treaty with the settlers more than 200 years ago unlike in New Zealand where the Maori queen signed a treaty with the governor of settlers. The convicts were social outcasts not fit to be in British society. They were banished to the far away land Australia which was a colony of British. That itself could explain how the convicts would have treated the natives. The Aboriginals had lived in Australia for 60 thousand years. Unfortunately, they were not organized like the Maori of New Zealand. The natives were scattered and they did not have a leader. The mistakes Maori made in New Zealand are leaving the territory and usage of English. Similarly, the Aboriginals made the same mistakes but in greater scale. The British cunningly used the ‘divide and rule’ policy all over the world to weaken natives and to impose the British Raj. Many thousands of natives were killed but there was nobody to punish the settlers. As they are used to, the crusaders from Europe decimated the local population. There was no humanity but barbarism of the Christians. In 1830 there were 10 thousand natives in Victoria but by 1853, there were only 2 thousand natives. This itself highlights the scale of destruction and massacres by the settlers (Australian Citizenship, Government of Australia, 2012).
The convicts tricked the locals to fight among themselves as they did in New Zealand. Whenever, a head of a