Skip to content

Cry-Bully Trougher Whines About Australia Day

Then blames everyone else for being ‘divisive’.

Let’s celebrate ‘We built a nation from scratch in 200 years’ Day. The Good Oil. Photoshop by Lushington Brady.

The cry bullies of leftist race-baiting are shameless.

More than a year after Australia emphatically voted No to racial separatism in the Constitution, they’re still whingeing. Worse, they’re hitching it to their Annual Festival of Lefty Whining about Australia Day. Even as Australians more and more emphatically endorse January 26 as our national day.

To top it all off, then they have the cheek to bleat, ‘Now look at what you made us do!’

Director of the Uluru Dialogue Geoff Scott has warned federal politicians against using Australia Day as a means to coerce local governments to hold celebrations on January 26, saying a “one-size-fits-all” approach is not suitable for a diverse nation […]

“Australia Day has become a source of division these days, which is unfortunate,” Mr Scott told the Australian. “But every Australian chooses how to celebrate Australia Day, and councils are no different.”

This leech has been sucking on the taxpayer tit for decades. Oops, I mean, he’s a ‘long-time public servant’ with ‘more than 30 years’ experience working in Aboriginal affairs’.

Hell, get a real job, fella. And stop trying to cry bully us with hypocritical garbage like this:

The former director-general of the NSW Department of Aboriginal Affairs likened the proposition to the “divisive” 2023 Indigenous voice referendum.

Divisive… because race-troughers like you were trying to impose literal racial division onto the Constitution. Then you screamed at anyone and everyone who disagreed as ‘racist’.

“Labor tried the opportunity to have a referendum on the voice, to have this matter put to the Australian people. People voted on it but I think the misinformation and campaigns run around it were quite divisive.”

Translation: we lost, but we will never, ever, accept the democratic decision of the Australian people.

Which is just what the left always do.

His comments come as the Victorian state government along with Melbourne City Council revealed they would not deviate from existing Australia Day policies this year, despite an uptick in public support to celebrate the ­national day.

While the City of Melbourne will host nine citizenship ceremonies, it is still council’s official position to advocate for the federal government to change the date of the national holiday away from January 26.

Tell us again how it’s everyone else who’s divisive.

“Australia Day has always been framed in this divisive manner and it’s unfortunate,” Mr Scott said. “But it’s a shame that politics has sort of reduced itself to banking on these modes of communications now.

No, it hasn’t “always been framed in this divisive manner”. Once upon a time, everyone just enjoyed our national holiday and long weekend (and, despite the frantic historical revisionism of the race-mongers, January 26 has been commemorated as our founding day since the earliest decades of the 1800s). It’s only been in the last decade or so that the left have decided to screech and whine about ‘Invasion Day’.

Although, come to think of it, there may be some merit to this ‘Invasion Day’ malarkey.

After all, the High Court of Australia specifically ruled in its Mabo judgement that Australia had never been invaded. If it had, the court ruled, native title would have been completely extinguished by right of conquest.

So, let’s take the left at their word and declare that Australia was invaded.

Then we can rename January 26 to ‘Suck Shit, You Lost’ Day, and whoop it up to our heart’s content.

I kind of like the sound of that.


💡
If you enjoyed this article please share it using the share buttons at the top or bottom of the article.

Latest

NASA Did Not Invent Velcro

NASA Did Not Invent Velcro

Public vs private innovation: the next time there is proposed legislation on the table to fund research and development, think twice about the history and the costs of state-funded innovation.

Members Public