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RE: On Frailty and White Australia

in #teamaustralia6 years ago (edited)

I caught the speeches over here in the Netherlands, and I'm frankly quite embarrassed. Add in the Katter defence and it is clear that there is anger against someone or something, but it is easiest to pick on the weakest and pretend that you are a strong man. Also, it is interesting that many of the loudest are not so many generations back, migrants themselves.

I remember that my parents were the subject of nasty stuff as they were not white, and thus visually fair game for any idiot that thought he was standing up for Australian values. They contributed more to society than most of these ill-reasoned haters, my father was a Mathematician during the years of Cold War, and my mother helped bring her experience of her training in open heart surgery to an Australia that was sorely needing skills like theirs.

I had my share of idiocy heaped on me while I was growing up. It was nasty, and was especially hurtful as I identified as Australian, as much as any other person.

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Hey @bengy, thanks for the upvote. It's a most curious thing, isn't it, Katter going on the way he is and suggesting intake from the Middle East should be curtailed when his own grandfather (I think?) was Lebanese. Truly bizarre.

That Chinese maxim "May you live in interesting times" was intended as an insult, I heard yesterday. Makes sense. Interesting times reveal us for the odd and complicated creatures we are :)

It is a weird thing listening to Katter in all those interviews.. It just gets more and more bizarre!

I find it strange to identify so strongly with such tribal as a stereotypical national identity or football teams... But I guess that is just me. I identify as an Australian, but I would not say that it is the defining part of my identity. There are many things, such as my interests and hobbies and the people I know and love that are much stronger contributing factors to my identity.

I find it strange (living overseas) that people deliberately seek out expats of the same nationality to gather with and be friends with.