Has anyone blamed colonialism yet?
The only thing that’s shocking about the latest wave of horrific Aboriginal violence in Darwin and other Australian towns is that it’s almost become par for the course.
And the most predictable thing about it is that the media will do absolutely everything they can to avoid telling the truth that it is Aboriginal violence. Instead, as when gangs of Africans run amok in the suburbs of Melbourne, it’s just ‘teens’ of no particular description.
The two teenage boys who allegedly broke into a home in Alice Springs and struck a woman with a detachable metal freezer handle so hard it rebounded, hitting a two-month-old baby and causing a brain bleed and fractured skull, had collectively been charged with almost 300 other offences and bailed 35 times – and were currently on bail.
In a serious escalation in the crime crisis that has long gripped the Northern Territory, police have also charged a man with breaking into a woman’s home and raping her while she slept, despite the man being on a good behaviour bond at the time […]
On Thursday three teenage boys – one of whom is yet to be identified by police – used a stolen car to approach the home of a 57-year-old man. Using bodily force, a baseball bat and tomahawk, they allegedly broke through the front door of the unit block.
The man challenged them but backed down once he saw the weapons. They demanded alcohol and he gave them a bottle of Screwball Whiskey.
Get that? Just ‘teens’, ‘a man’. Nothing else you need to know.
Occasionally, though, even the mainstream media slip up and let a teensy clue through.
Sources told the Australian he allegedly admitted to police to having sex with a “white woman”.
Unsurprisingly, the father of the bashed baby doesn’t put much trust in the government to do anything about this rampant criminality.
He said his “distraught and upset” wife is also still in hospital in Adelaide, and added he doesn’t have faith in Prime Minister Anthony Albanese being able to fix any of the issues in Alice Springs.
“It wouldn’t be the same if this was happening to him,” he said. “What do you say that doesn’t fall on deaf ears?”
Oh, come now, Albo managed to squeeze in a couple of hours to visit Alice Springs earlier in the year, before he jetted off to spend a few days watching the tennis. At least that was quicker than his response to a terror attack on a Melbourne synagogue: he took four days to bother with that one. He was too busy playing tennis with the rich folks at Cottesloe.
It’s not like any of this is because of Labor policy, after all.
Alice Springs experienced a massive surge in youth crime at the start of last year after Labor sunsetted alcohol restrictions.
The move to wind back dry community provisions that restricted the intake of alcohol in remote communities led to an explosion of violence on the streets of Alice Springs and many remote regions, and the shuttering of shops.
Oops, they almost let it slip again. Who lives on ‘remote communities’? Must be those Italians and Poles again.
But, hey, at least these people-of-no-particular-description are equal opportunity thugs. They’re just giving white folks they same treatment they dole out to their own kids.
The deaths of four children aged between six months and 15 years old exposed fatal shortcomings in the state’s child protection services, a coronial inquest has found.
The inquest highlighted how systemic failures prevented four vulnerable children from accessing the support they needed during times of crisis […]
The first child – a two-year-old living in Mildura – was killed and hidden in the roof of their family home soon after the Victorian Child Protection Service had closed the case, which was monitoring the child’s safety and wellbeing.
Once again, just children of no particular description.
Until the MSM slip up again and accidentally drop some telling details.
The second case the coronial inquest heard about was a six-month-old Aboriginal baby who died after being assaulted by their mother’s partner […]
A third child – a 15-year-old Aboriginal teenager – died in a fire on March 1, 2017, started by their mother’s former partner […]
The second and third children were First Nations people who both struggled to access the Aboriginal Child Specialist Advice and Support Service (ACSASS).
It’s almost like there’s a pattern there. Something linking all these grim cases. Something so obvious that even Marama Davidson would have to see it. The harm being inflicted on Aboriginal children by their parents is at epidemic levels.
Child Protection attempted to contact ACSASS in both cases. However, the average case load for ACSASS was more than 100 children per case practitioner, the inquest heard.
But let’s not talk about that. Far easier to babble about ‘the legacy of colonialism’ and the so-called ‘Stolen Generations’. Despite the fact that not one person has ever been proven to have been removed from their parents solely because they were Aboriginal.
Above all, never, ever, admit that the mythology of the ‘Stolen Generations’ is in large part responsible for the violence being perpetrated against Aboriginal children today.
Victorian Coroner John Cain told the inquest that, despite several reports of family violence, the system failed to intervene effectively.
That’s because authorities are too terrified of being smeared with another ‘Stolen Generations’ falsehood. Not only will they do anything to avoid removing Aboriginal children from violent, criminal parents, but, even when they do, ‘cultural concerns’ mean that Aboriginal children are almost never allowed to be fostered or adopted by non-Aboriginal families. Instead, they are just shuttled from one violent Aboriginal family to another.
But, hey, at least their ‘culture’ is being kept alive. In the worst possible way.