Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has Called on Voters to Say 'No' to Anthony Albanese's Voice to Parliament! By James Reed

It looks like the great ladies, Jacinta price, an aboriginal, and the well-known Pauline Hanson, are leading the charge against the woke voice referendum, to create a third chamber of parliament, where some indigenous elite looks over all laws and gives the thumbs up or down, depending upon whether they think the laws impact upon their community. While their calls are said to be non-binding, we can suppose that the wicked UN, and local woke will be watching if parliament dares oppose anything they dictate. Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has called on voters to say “no” to the  Voice to Parliament, saying that  it won't make a practical difference to Aboriginal Australians, and indeed it will not, for this is but one more tool to serve the new Class elites.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11111349/Jacinta-Nampijinpa-Price-calls-Anthony-Albaneses-Voice-Parliament-virtue-signalling.html?ito=push-notification&ci=pGKBdbhwyO&cri=e6VvzzI95B&si=mIsznWj1izHY&xi=77d91f20-cee4-482e-a65e-d6b2045f841f&ai=11111349

“Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has called on voters to say 'no' to Anthony Albanese's Voice to Parliament, believing it won't make a practical difference to Aboriginal Australians.

The Prime Minister wants to enshrine the Voice, a group that would advise government on how policies would affect Indigenous people, in the Constitution.

Senator Price is against the idea and recently suggested that Mr Albanese is just 'virtue-signalling' and merely wants his own 'Whitlam moment' like other Labor Prime Ministers.

In 1975, Gough Whitlam famously poured sand into the hands of traditional land owner Vincent Lingiari to symbolise the return of pastoral land to the Gurindji people.

Senator Price, who was elected as Country Liberal Party senator for the Northern Territory in May, fears that enshrining the Voice in the constitution means it can't be dismantled if it fails.

She also fears it will be too bureaucratic and not actually help improve the lives of Indigenous Australians. 

'If there is anything history tells us, it is that loading bureaucracy upon bureaucracy tramples a people's path toward self-determination,' she wrote in The Australian.

'To enshrine a Voice to Parliament is to enshrine the notion Aboriginal Australia will forever be marginalised and will forever need special measures pertaining to our race. 

'If this government is so hellbent on establishing this voice then it needs to first demonstrate it can be successful, by legislating it rather than enshrining it.'

Senator Price also warned supporters of the Voice not to belittle opponents. 

'Gaslighting Australians to coerce support for a 'Yes' vote and calling Australians racist, troublemakers and uncaring if they do not oblige does not make for a healthy democracy and is completely and utterly un-Australian,' she wrote.

'It's OK to say ''No''.'

Senator Price doubled down in an appearance on Sky News on Sunday, comparing the Voice to Kevin Rudd's famous apology to the Stolen Generations in 2008.

'When he said he was going to apologize I felt that's that's fairly useless. It's not going to do anything whatsoever to change the circumstances,' she said.

'There's absolutely no substance behind any of it.'

'Nothing changes on the ground and it's like doing the same thing over again expecting a different result.'”

The take home message: it is ok to say NO!

 

 

 

 

 

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Monday, 25 November 2024

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