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26th January celebration

Australia Day reminds us of the tremendous job our forefathers did in travelling half way around the world in little ships to a completely undeveloped land with any potential help months away so with the very real possibility of extinction before it arrived.

The local people were known to not be a threat because when Captain Cook had spent a short time here eight years before he had not been able to communicate with them because they always ran away.

But there was no support for life in the form of crops or shelter. Nothing. The local people had not developed the land in the least. Everything necessary for life had to be introduced by the new arrivals.

Over the next sixty years convicts were brought to Sydney to provide labour for the growing of crops and building of houses and roads and bridges and anything else necessary for life as it was experienced in the lands the newcomers had come from.

Many free settlers came as well to develop their own patch of Australia.

Governor Phillip offered the locals the same help given to convicts who had served their term but only one of them took up his offer to work.

Sheep had been introduced to the country which provided the locals as a diversion from their dull life by them running around killing as many as they could which naturally upset the shepherds who on occasion acted to protect their flocks.

Hence the development of the country Australia was a result of the efforts and skills of the new arrivals. Those who were here when the new folk came were no help at all.

On the basis of Australians having been responsible for making Australia the home it is at present the local people do not have the right to be included in the group Australians.

There are also people occupying the country who have recently been given shelter from events in the land they were brought up in. Some of these people insist on behaving here as they would if they were in their original location. Such behaviour is sometimes completely unacceptable and if, after sufficient warnings about its status they continue to behave in an unAustralian manner, they should be returned to their place of origin.

Which brings us back to the locals who were here originally but had done nothing to make Australia what it now is. So what had they been doing for sixty thousand years?

Walkabout is all they did here. Not everywhere but over their patch of the country in their small group. Hence there were many small, independent groups. They were killed if they ventured into another folks land. Or they killed them if they wanted more country. They did not invent one thing in sixty thousand years. Not one. They ate what they could dig up or kill which included some large, slow creatures here when they arrived. They were the antithesis of conservationists. Current admiration of their way of life and a culture that promoted no change for sixty thousand years is just another example of the stupidity of our flock of politicians and why I am sorry my daughter has not engaged in The Family of All Life Alliance and taken over running the country so that I can once more be proud of my and my ancestors country of birth.

So Australians, celebrate your Australia Day and ignore those who were here and did not contribute to our Australia.

 

The locals life before the First Fleet

Help Australian Aboriginals celebrate the 26th January in the manner of before the First Fleet.
Help Aboriginal communities return to their state before 1788.
In each community you will help them
Destroy their houses.
Destroy electricity supplies.
Destroy their water supplies.
Destroy their vehicles.
Burn all their clothes.
Bury all their food.
Destroy all their cooking utensils.
Provide them with some spears.
Provide them with some stone tools.

Australia will thank you, particularly the taxpayer who is currently spending billions each year to improve the lot of Aboriginals without them responding with any thanks.
The Aboriginals will thank you for freeing them from the imposition of a foreign culture and returning them to their life before the Governor arrived.
Aboriginals will be happy that they will no longer be in a position to sing this song.


I Love the Governor
I love my car
Walking was the pits
I love my house
My humpy was not warm
I love McDonalds
Kangaroos are just too hard to catch
I love a Boags
Which can be a problem
I love my tele
Talking is good but pictures beat it
I love my phone
Smoke signals aren’t as good
It was all from Governor Phillip
Coming here back in 1788
That I no longer just walk
That I no longer am stone age man
He changed me to modern man

Breadcrumbs

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