Make this my home page
More buttons
Best of the Day
Page
Bill Of Rights For Australia?
Video
Michael Moore: Auto Workers Can Not be Thrown Out of Work
Blog
Children's welfare groups slam net filters
Game
Ghostbusters: The Videogame
Art
Local - Small town, big city blues
Cool tools
Hot links
Everything you need to know about microscopic water bears
News for nerds
For lovers of the Green Fairy
Stories and art from Australia's Yolgnu people
Australia's best science fiction author
Did the earth just move?
Don't discount journalism
Novelist and comic book legend's homepage
Searchable history of the internet
Exposing systematic torture in Iran
Museum of science fiction, utopia and extraordinary journeys
The real story of christianity
Image bookmarking
Developing tech to get the internet to its full potential
Free Culture, Open Government, Liberty

Search Results

12 found

Many people apparently feel that I’m a bit arrogant but I have listened to recent criticism and I would like to respond in a spirit of cleansing. Firstly I do admit that sexual abuse by catholic clergy has been a serious problem that has hurt many thousands of people and has rocked the church, exacerbated by church leaders denying and covering up thousands of offences.

Getting to the point, I don’t want to mention names but there are two letters sent by me to two victims of a priest under my ‘jurisdiction’. In one of the letters I make two false statements but I believe I did not intend to lie. I was trying to simplify and avoid saying too much but in hindsight even that was a sin of omission. I apologise for that.

As you, and even I, cannot see into my heart I must admit that the two false statements in my letter were my responsibility and mean that on the evidence it would appear that I lied. I would be insulting your intelligence and undermining honest debate about the church to say otherwise. I do not want to be one of those church leaders who has denied and covered up offences and stifled honest debate in and out of the church as many have for hundreds of years.

Today we are caught in ten word sound bites. The truth is more complex than that but it is also crucial that we seek the truth with our whole heart. I apologise for those two false statements in my letter and hope God will forgive me.

From George Pell (we hope)

 . . read more
Australian Deputy Opposition leader Julie Bishop finds herself in a semantic tangle with an apologetic interviewer.  . . read more
Last week's apology by Australian PM Kevin Rudd to the nation's indigenous population for mistreatment by successive governments, including the stealing of children, was seen as a vital step in reconciliation. However not everyone (including members of the Liberal/National parties) thought saying sorry was the right thing to do. This 'alternative apology' - which has been circulating on the internet - is an example of the ugly, racist Australian underbelly. . . read more

President Bush says sorry to African Americans

At 9am, Feb 13/08, the Australian Parliament formally apologised for the hurt and suffering its previous policies had inflicted on the indigenous population. Such policies included the forcible removal of children from their families. “These injustices must never happen again,” the Prime Minister said, “they are a great stain on the nation’s soul”. For thirty minutes, Kevin Rudd held the nation in his hands, as millions cheered, applauded and wept. Watching a broadcast of the apology in the White House, George Bush was transfixed, and he urgently summoned speech writers. RICHARD NEVILLE found himself amongst them, offering suggestions...

 . . read more

Australia’s reconciliation process with its indigenous citizen’s has begun. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s statesmanship on the day we said ‘sorry’ to the stolen generations augers well for the future despite the missing word from the ceremony today. The word ‘love’.

It is love alone which can deliver the healing and take us, all of us, to a new place. Love helps us to see the world through the eyes of others; to share their ‘world views’ and to feel with them. And it is only by sharing that we can co-create the context in which change can take place. A Croatian neighbour confided in me today – in halting English – that Aborigines were beyond help; my response is that it is him that needs help.

Australia is a better place after the apology. And it is now that the real work begins. With each other.

 . . read more
Kevin Rudd’s ‘Sorry’ to the stolen generations of indigenous Australians was social democracy’s finest hour. Kevin Rudd went up onto the mountain and delivered. The first order of business, on the first day in parliament, of the new Labor government. Nothing would, nothing could, and nothing did take precedence over the apology. HALL GREENLAND reports from the watching crowds at Redfern, with photos by JACK CARNEGIE. . . read more
On the day of apology for the stolen generations, laid out before the Australian Parliament, 4000 candles flickered spelling out the words 'Sorry, the first step'.  . . read more

In its initial response to the 'Bringing them Home' Report in 1997, the Howard government argued that 'We do not believe our generation should be asked to accept responsibility for the acts of earlier generations.' But many of those acts occurred within the lifetimes of generations now living.

Mick Dodson: “Who are these people, who is this generation that took my grandmother, my father, my mother and my grandfather and my two sisters? Who is this generation that tried to take me from my family in 1960? What generation do we look to if Mr Howard says it wasn't this one? Where is this mythical group of Australians who made these laws, adopted these policies, put them into practice, who took the kids?”.

Critics of the 'Bringing them Home' Report believe the report demonises the white officials who were involved in removing indigenous children. The late Editor of Quadrant magazine, P.P. McGuinness, reiterated this point in an editorial.”To denigrate the honest and sincere efforts of so many people who thought they were doing the right thing”, says McGuinness, “is merely a historical ignorance.” But according to philosopher Raimond Gaita, this view represents a kind of moral blindness about our immediate past. [More]

 . . read more

The Rudd government's handling of the sorry saga over an apology and payment of compensation to members of the Stolen Generation represents both a step forward and a step backward. And as any fifth grader will tell you, that adds up to not much progress at all. The step forward is that a national apology will be delivered. Granted, for Indigenous Australians extracting the word 'sorry' must feel like drawing blood from a stone. But a belated apology is better than no apology at all. The step backward is that Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and his Indigenous affairs minister, Jenny Macklin have decided that no compensation will be forthcoming. That is deeply disappointing. Rudd simply did not want his Prime Ministership defined by an early act of 'generosity' towards 'the blacks'.

While it may well have been the 'right thing to do', politics is about pragmatism and populism, not principle and leadership. Unfortunately, Aboriginal people tend not to be all that pragmatic when it comes to their basic human rights. They have this crazy notion that their rights should be respected, no matter what. And a basic human right the world over is that if you are harmed, you're entitled to an apology, an assurance it will not occur again, and compensation. Rudd's plan of action on this issue is straight out of the John Howard playbook on 'Dealing with The Natives' - whatever you do, do less than the bare minimum. But surely Rudd must realise by now that this approach simply delays the inevitable, and guarantees you a bad write-up in the history books.

The truth is that just as mankind developed opposable thumbs and crawled outof the caves, Australia will - kicking, screaming or otherwise - eventually be dragged into the human rights community. We will progress. We will evolve. Indigenous Australians will one day be compensated for stolen land, stolen wages and stolen children. We will one day have to pay out the 'Great Australian Trifecta'. [More]

 . . read more
Busting the myths about saying sorry . . read more
12
   
Next
Shministim. A new word, not a very new concept.

We, high-school graduate teens, declare that we shall work against the Israeli occupation and oppression policy in the occupied territories and the territories of Israel. Therefore we will refuse to take part of these actions, which are being done under our name as part of the IDF.

Our refusal comes first and foremost as a protest on the separation, control, oppression and killing policy held by the state of Israel in the occupied territories, as we understand that this oppression, killing and routing of hatred will never lead us to peace, and they are all contradictory to the basic values a society that pretends to be democratic should have.

All the members of this group believe in developing the value of social work. We are not refusing to serve the society we live in, but are protesting against the occupation and the ways of actions which the militaristic system holds as it is today- crushing civil rights, discriminating on a racial base and acting opposing international laws.

We oppose the actions taken in the name of the "defense" of the Israeli society (Checkpoints, targeted killing, apartheid roads-available for Jews only, curfews etc.) that serve the occupation and exploitation policy , annex more conquered territories to the State of Israel and tramples the rights of the Palestinian population in an aggressive manner. These actions serve as a band-aid covering a bleeding wound, and as a limited and temporary solution that will accelerate and aggravate the conflict further.

We expostulate the plundering and the theft of territories and source of income to the Palestinians in exchange to the expansion of the settlements, reasoning to defend Israeli territories. In addition, we oppose any transformation of Palestinian cities and villages to ghettos without minimal living conditions or income sources enclosed by the separation wall.

We also protest the humiliating and disrespectful behavior of the military forces towards Palestinians in the West Bank; violence towards demonstrators, public humiliations, arrests, destruction of property regardless to any safety or defense needs, all of which violate global human rights and international law.

The wall and blockades surround the Palestinian Territories and serve as a halter around the Palestinian's neck. The soldiers who commit crimes under the patronage and protection of their commanders reflect the image of the Israeli society; a destructive and surprising society that is incapable of accepting its neighboring nation as a partner and not as an enemy.

In order to hold an effective dialogue between the two societies, we, the well-established and stronger society, have the responsibility of establishing and strengthening the other. Only with a more socially and financially established partner could we work towards peace rather than one-sided retaliation acts. Rather than supporting those citizens who have hope for peace, the military cast sanctions and pushes more and more people towards acts of extreme violence and escalation.

We hereby challenge every citizen who wonders if the military's policy in the occupied territories is conducive to the progression of the peace process, to discover by himself/ herself the truth and to lift the veil which distorts the reality of the situation; to verify statistical data; to look for the humane side in him/her and in the society which stands in front of him/her, to disprove the myths that were routed within us regarding the necessity of the IDF's in the Palestinian Occupied Territories, and to stand up against every action which he finds irrational and illegal.

In a place were there are humans, there is someone to talk to. Therefore, we ask to create a dialogue that goes beyond the power struggle, the retaliation and one-sided attrition actions; to disprove the "No Partner" myth, which is leading to a lose-lose situation of an ongoing frustration, and to move to more humane methods.

We cannot hurt in the name of defense or imprison in the name of freedom; therefore we cannot be moral and serve the occupation.

Signed
Members of the Shministim Letter 2008.

Find out about our Widget

Feedback

27 nov

The HomepageDAILY community likes to co-create both content and process. What are you thinking right now about what we do and how we do it? Tell us about the news, videos and stories and anything else you see on HPD. What you like, what you don't like, what you'd like to see in future. Recommend a website, video or article; send us pix, new stories - share it with us and by so doing you are giving us permission to share it with the world.

Leave Feedback here

             *********************************

Re: This Boy's Life

I find many of the articles on the blog very interesting. Thanks for keeping me updated on thing happening around the world. I particularly found the article about Transgender children interesting. I hadn't reaised the incidents of it were so high. - Sarah