Australian Indigenous Voice Referendum

I was just in Oz for two weeks visiting family and I was sad to see that the leader of the opposition has made the referendum on a constitutional amendment to acknowledge indigenous people in the constitution and create an (advisory, not binding on legislation or policy) indigenous voice to parliament and executive government a partisan issue. The conservative members of my
in-law family were already parroting the opposition leader’s dog-whistle talking points (Labor is refusing to tell us the full scope of the proposed Voice’s powers, what indigenous people “really want” is an end to crime and child molestation in their communities) rather than having a nuanced discussion.

What do Aussie shipmates think about the tenor of the discussions about the Voice that they see going on around them in public and in private, and do you think the referendum will pass? (It needs a nationwide majority and a majority in a majority of states to pass - no easy task.)
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Comments

  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    The history of constitutional referendums here is that very few proposals are successful. The so-called double majority that you set out has resulted in very few amendments to the Constitution.

    So far, we do not know whether we will vote in favour or not. We shan't be making our decision until we've heard much more debate. The proposed amendment seems far from clear, vague to the point of lacking meaning. What we shall be looking for are comments from members of the indigenous community. If that community wants the amendment, we'll vote for it. If that community is split, I don't know what we'll do - probably vote against it.
  • Gee D wrote: »
    The history of constitutional referendums here is that very few proposals are successful. The so-called double majority that you set out has resulted in very few amendments to the Constitution.

    So far, we do not know whether we will vote in favour or not. We shan't be making our decision until we've heard much more debate. The proposed amendment seems far from clear, vague to the point of lacking meaning. What we shall be looking for are comments from members of the indigenous community. If that community wants the amendment, we'll vote for it. If that community is split, I don't know what we'll do - probably vote against it.

    The coverage I have read about the Uluru Statement from the Heart that inspired the referendum seems to indicate that it has broad support from the indigenous communities (although these communities are very diverse). I’m not sure how representative the indigenous figures that have aligned with the No campaign are of the consensus in the communities they come from. I think there is a concern among indigenous groups that all representative advisory bodies that have existed in the past have been created by government action or by legislation and were easily gotten rid of when there was a change in government, thus necessitating a constitutional amendment in order to create a permanent Voice.

    The Greens originally voiced some skepticism because the broader issue of there being no treaty with indigenous groups remains unaddressed (although I think they now are supporting the referendum?) but the Uluru Statement, which again as far as I understand was the result of broad consultation across indigenous communities, specifically endorsed a sequence of Voice, Treaty, and then Truthtelling (of the History of Dispossession). You may think that the order should be reversed, but this is the order of priorities that was agreed to through that consultative process.
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    If the First People want it, we'll vote for it. To be honest, we're not concerned by what the Greens say about anything.
  • Gee D wrote: »
    If the First People want it, we'll vote for it. To be honest, we're not concerned by what the Greens say about anything.

    I guess the question is, to play devil’s advocate with my previous post, even taking the Uluru Statement from the Heart into account, how does one know what the the first People Want? Is a polling majority of people who identify as indigenous enough? How much support is needed across the many different indigenous communities with their different languages, histories, and cultures?

    The coverage that I have read about the referendum has been from the ABC and the Guardian Australia, which given the progressive bent of their readership might not be giving me a full picture of the debate on the ground in Australia. Is there any other coverage you would recommend?
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    I'd not go to any other source, but we don't really rely much on the Guardian.

    As to your first paragraph, we're relying on what we see and hear from those communities.
  • Simon ToadSimon Toad Shipmate
    I support the Voice despite opposition from some indigenous activist groups, especially younger folks. The objection is centred around not whethet the Voice is good, but whether a treaty with the Crown should come first.

    There are different objections to the Voice from the right, and from some constitutional lawyers. I'm happy enough with Dutton's opposition as I hope that the Federal Liberals remain a divided, feuding rabble for about 15 years.

    I support the Voice because indigenous leaders I support are backing it, chief among them Noel Pearson, but also Ken Wyatt. That there is divison in Aboriginal circles is a good thing. It's to be expected and celebtated.
  • SojournerSojourner Shipmate
    Agreed
  • Not 100% sure who the "we" is in Gee's posts. There is no consensus on this.
    The Voice referendum is coming up (14 October 2023), and I honestly can't tell what is going to happen. I have been firmly in the "Yes" camp since the current government was elected and announced the referendum was happening. The federal opposition has elected to oppose the Voice, along with the powerful media voices controlled by the Murdochs (with some surprising exceptions). It certainly has brought out the worst in people, not unlike the lead up to the last plebiscite held down here, on marriage equality in 2017. If I am being generous, I could surmise that is mainly about fear. Certainly there are one or two prominent people I respect who are advocating for 'No,' if I understand it because they feel unable to trust the government (led by either party) to honour any commitments made, or to prioritise Aboriginal welfare. I'm not sanguine about the Yes vote getting up, but I hope very much it does. A shy hope, as Manning Clark might have put it.
  • "We" is as I've used it in many other posts - Madame and I.
  • A definite yes
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    edited September 2023
    @stonespring hasn't been on-board for a few months, but I'm interested in this part of their post...

    The conservative members of my
    in-law family were already parroting the opposition leader’s dog-whistle talking points (Labor is refusing to tell us the full scope of the proposed Voice’s powers, what indigenous people “really want” is an end to crime and child molestation in their communities

    As stated by stonespring, the Liberal arguments are probably just dog-whistles for anti-indigenous sentiment, but I am curious as to what they are claiming the hidden "full scope" of the Voice will be. Are they alleging it will somehow morph into a parallel government with actual policy-making powers? And if so, how exactly do they claim that will happen?

    From what I can tell from this thread and wikipedia, the Voice would basically be just a glorified think-tank, which I'm guessing is one of the reasons some indigenous people oppose it, given the absence of a treaty with indigenous groups.
  • I think not. The “think tankers” ( whoever they might be) likely would not get a word in. Interesting to see just who among our Indigenous brethren are agin it; no clear reason given as far as I can see. Do such people think that they know better than most? I don’t know.

    Have listened to Indigenous colleagues and patients, also to those involved in health/ education in rural/remote Oz, to friends who have Aboriginal grandchildren and have decided yes.

    It is 56 years since Australian Aborginals were recognised as citizens.

    Enough is enough.
  • stetson wrote: »

    From what I can tell from this thread and wikipedia, the Voice would basically be just a glorified think-tank, which I'm guessing is one of the reasons some indigenous people oppose it, given the absence of a treaty with indigenous groups.

    The last part is important. I think the Voice is understood as a first step by some in mob toward a treaty. Others, like perhaps Noel Pearson, are talking about it as a final step, which seems odd to me - there will still be massive Indigenous disadvantage the day after the referendum, no matter what the outcome is.
    The beauty of putting this in the constitution is that subsequent governments will not simply be able to repeal it, or at least not without another referendum.
    Re the think tank analogy - I think of the body advocated in the Statement from the Heart more in terms of the lobby groups which already play this function for enormous corporate interests, like iron ore and fossil fuels. Unlike those, the Voice body will not (one hopes) be party to more or less bribing politicians to pursue private interests rather than the good of the country. Also unlike those, this body will have constitutional legitimacy. So - not the same as those lobbies, but a similar category of thing. But maybe that is unhelpful.

    Thanks for clarifying, Gee, I don't follow you around on the ship and so had no idea what you do on many other posts.
  • HuiaHuia Shipmate
    How long after voting before a result is known?

    (As an aside - The actual day of voting is the same as the General election here. )
  • stetson wrote: »
    @stonespring hasn't been on-board for a few months, but I'm interested in this part of their post...

    The conservative members of my
    in-law family were already parroting the opposition leader’s dog-whistle talking points (Labor is refusing to tell us the full scope of the proposed Voice’s powers, what indigenous people “really want” is an end to crime and child molestation in their communities

    As stated by stonespring, the Liberal arguments are probably just dog-whistles for anti-indigenous sentiment, but I am curious as to what they are claiming the hidden "full scope" of the Voice will be. Are they alleging it will somehow morph into a parallel government with actual policy-making powers? And if so, how exactly do they claim that will happen?

    From what I can tell from this thread and wikipedia, the Voice would basically be just a glorified think-tank, which I'm guessing is one of the reasons some indigenous people oppose it, given the absence of a treaty with indigenous groups.

    Hi! Sorry to take so long to respond to this. You've already read this I think, but here is the proposed amendment to the Australian Constitution (from voice.gov.au):
    Chapter IX Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples

    129 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice

    In recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia:

    there shall be a body, to be called the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice;
    the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice may make representations to the Parliament and the Executive Government of the Commonwealth on matters relating to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples;
    the Parliament shall, subject to this Constitution, have power to make laws with respect to matters relating to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice, including its composition, functions, powers and procedures.

    My husband's family's rhetoric at the time - this was April and I have not been in Australia since and have not discussed the matter further with his family - was that any change to the constitution was potentially opening Pandora's box, that the wording of the amendment about the voice's role is vague and could be interpreted expansively, and generally that this was a waste of time and money. The speculation about the Voice's potential powers was fleshed out in more detail in some of the early questions put by the Opposition to the PM and ministers in Parliament at the time (this was long before the referendum date had been set). And social media mis- and dis-information was just starting to kick off. I've heard some of the tenor of the debate, especially on social media, has got worse since then.

    None of my husband's family are experts in law or politics, and I don't know that much about the Australian constitution or legal system either. The discussion of the merits of the Voice was brief (none of them like to discuss Australian politics much, and like quite a few people I have met in various countries are much more comfortable discussing American politics). The conversation pretty soon stopped being serious - at least one member of my husband's family loves to hijack any serious discussion with her jokes.

    It's sad that the polling for the Yes campaign looks so bad. The ABC analysts I've been listening to have been saying that the voters who are persuadable are concentrated in the outer suburbs. Was the Yes campaign too slow in reaching out to them, or was its original media strategy unwise?
  • We don't really understand what the debate is all about. Those whom the amendments are intended to benefit are grossly underprivileged in so many ways. Their leaders say that the proposals will benefit these people, maybe not much immediately but will over a period of time. They support adoption of the proposals. That's enough for us, and we'll be voting Yes.

    A technical note which has not been the subject of much attention is the method of amendment, with the requirement that any constitutional amendment needs to achieve the so-called double majority - that is a majority overall of all voters, and also a majority of voters in a majority of States. Many past proposals for amendments have failed to deliver both these majorities.

  • On the way to do my civic duty and grab the sausage sanger at Darlinghurst Public after side trip to Surry Hills to feed grandcat. Hoping that it gets through and trying hard to ignore opinion polls which have been running at 45% for the yes vote.

    It’ll be pushing 100% in these parts where we are so many leftie gay greenie woke wikkid libruls however among those influenced by Fox news, the Murdoch press and other such malignant organs it could be another matter.
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    I forgot that this thread existed and posted on the general NZ/Oz one. We went, voted and then on to coffee. Not very busy around the polling station we go to, no lamington stand. Perhaps having only Yes and No rather than a number of parties had a hand in that.
  • Was in and out of Darlo at 9 am the P& F were on duty flogging snags ( beef & veg). In this neck of the woods many polling stations are at local schools so it’s a big fundraiser.

    I understand that up the road at St Frank’s there is not only a polling station with snags but also a delayed blessing of local animals by one of the friars👍
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    Surely that's against the rules?

    We voted at a nearby Catholic school which says it's for children with disabilities. Not the usual people hanging around selling lamingtons, tea and coffee, etc. I hope that the absence does not make the vote informal. Strangely, it's only a couple of hundred metres from another booth - once the Methodist hall but on the great division of property it went to the Presbyterians (who lost a very fine building nearby in the merger re-arrangements).
  • Delaying the blessing by 10 days? That would be typical of the Frannies. I recall 30-odd years ago when the area bishop forbade girl altar servers: the then PP commented that he’d received the OK from the provincial ( of Oceania) and that trumped the area bishop.

    Now back to the referendum before a Host comes by with a big stick….
  • MiliMili Shipmate
    Voting today turned out to be a bit stressful. First I am in a new electorate and had checked where my local polling place was a couple of weeks ago, but forgot as I didn't write it down. Then the electoral website was not working today to show polling places. I found another web page that listed polling places and went to a scout hall nearby. For some reason I was feeling anxious and the man handing out No cards was a bit odd and was repeating 'no, no, no' or 'pass, pass, pass' or something similar which was intimidating. Then when I said no thank-you he loudly complained that barely anyone was taking No cards. I wasn't going to take a Yes card either, as it's not like I needed to know how to vote, but took one in support after No man's behaviour. The young woman handing out Yes cards then told me the No team had been angry at them and called them Nazis! I told her they could probably complain as I don't think people handing out voting cards are allowed to harass the other side. I also mentioned it to the staff at the voting booth, but they said they are not supposed to interact with them.

    I then found out I had gone to a booth in the wrong electorate, as I am on the border of two electorates. While finding this out an older man collapsed nearby. I told the staff I had first aid training, but another first aider volunteered to help, which was better as I am pretty small and the man who collapsed was a quite large. I kept an eye out to see if they needed extra assistance and asked about a defib, but I don't think there was one. Thankfully the man regained consciousness quickly and the ambulance didn't take long to arrive.

    After filling out a form and voting at the table for people from other electorates I headed out to buy a sausage, only to end up near the No guy again. He started cracking jokes about how the man being taken away in an ambulance was the first casualty of the election and the stress must have been too much for him. All of us who witnessed what happened, including children, were pretty shaken up so I bluntly told him the man could have died and it was nothing to make jokes about.

    I'm not too optimistic about the Yes vote getting up, based on polling and the difficulty of passing referendums. I do know some people who are voting No for reasonable reasons, but people like the man at the polling booth who think allowing Indigenous Australians more of a voice in matters that affect them is the same as the evil policies and actions of the Nazis really upset me and there are too many of them in Australia :(
  • MiliMili Shipmate
    Looks like the results are already in :( Still a chance the Yes vote might get up in my state of Victoria https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-10-14/voters-reject-indigeneous-voice-to-parliament-referendum/102974522
  • MiliMili Shipmate
    Sorry to post again, but looking at the local results my electorate has voted Yes, Yes votes currently 63%, and the neighbouring electorate where I voted is too close to call, but has 52% Yes votes currently.
  • Not looking great overall ( ABC news online) but the show isn’t over till the fat lady sings….
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    Just checked the same site and there's no way that the Yes vote could make up the difference.
  • Unfortunately yes. Just commiserating with Indigenous colleagues via FB.

    Very disappointed.
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    Indeed. The Libs have a lot to answer for in all this.
  • Yes, God rot them👿
  • I've enjoyed reading the referendum-day snapshots on here. Sorry to see the vote didn't go the way most of us hoped.
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    edited October 2023
    Copied in from a Neely [should be ‘newly’!] started and now closed thread. BroJames, Purgatory Host
    I've not been following this story closely and it's been over-shadowed by other events on the global stage.

    I have relatives and friends in Australia though but haven't discussed it with them yet - but can anticipate what some of them at least might say.

    But what do Shipmates make of the result of the Australian referendum on the recognition of indigenous people's and Polynesian islanders' rights?
  • Sorry folks, I hadn't noticed this thread which is why I started another one.

    Been trying to catch up.

    Someone mentioned some No voters making that choice for 'good reasons'.

    What were the arguments against?
  • BroJames wrote: »
    Copied in from a Neely started and now closed thread. BroJames, Purgatory Host
    I've not been following this story closely and it's been over-shadowed by other events on the global stage.

    I have relatives and friends in Australia though but haven't discussed it with them yet - but can anticipate what some of them at least might say.

    But what do Shipmates make of the result of the Australian referendum on the recognition of indigenous people's and Polynesian islanders' rights?

    Surely you mean Torres Strait rather than Polynesian islanders?

  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    I don’t love autocorrect!

  • TSI are largely unknown and disregarded not only overseas but also in central and western parts of the continent.

    They are a distinct entity and have their own flag: Google is your friend.
  • MiliMili Shipmate
    Sorry folks, I hadn't noticed this thread which is why I started another one.

    Been trying to catch up.

    Someone mentioned some No voters making that choice for 'good reasons'.

    What were the arguments against?

    I think I said some people voted No for reasonable reasons. Some Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people didn't think the Voice went far enough and voted no while pushing for a full Treaty.

    A lot of people voted No because the referendum only allows changes to the constitution in order to create a Voice and therefore the government couldn't provide a full description of exactly how things would work. Some of these people fell for misinformation that voting Yes would allow changes that would make their lives worse or give Indigenous Australians special rights that other Australians don't have, but many just didn't understand what it all meant and didn't feel comfortable voting for something they didn't know whether they agreed with or not.

    There were also a minority of Indigenous people voting No because they didn't feel Aboriginal Land Councils were doing enough in their local areas and thought the Voice committee would be more of the same and run by 'elites'. These views were then shared to non-Indigenous people who felt excused to vote No as only 'elite' Indigenous people would benefit (more misinformation in that case, but based on a kernel of truth).

  • TukaiTukai Shipmate
    The Capital Territory (ACT), where I live and vote, is the one jurisdiction that voted "yes". At our sausage-rich polling place (the local school), there was not even a "vote no" banner to be seen, though several surging us to "vote yes". No great surprise demographically, as the ACT has a more highly educated and younger population than any of the States. Unfortunately, not being a State means that our votes only half-count (i.e. they are counted in the national total, but don't count towards the "majority of states" needed for a referendum to pass).

    But I'm not surprised a thenational outcome, given theamount of lies told by "no" crowd, enthusiastically led by PC Dutton, leader of the parliamentary Opposition.
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    On the general Oz thread, I've posted a strange result. In our electorate, polling booths close to the train line recorded decent Yes majorities. When you move further away though, the No vote becomes the majority. Without being snobbish about it, the areas along the line would be rather better off.
  • Sorry folks, I hadn't noticed this thread which is why I started another one.

    Been trying to catch up.

    Someone mentioned some No voters making that choice for 'good reasons'.

    What were the arguments against?

    The "No" camp was divided into the Conservative No camp and the Progressive No camp.

    The Conservative No argument argued that no one racial or ethnic group should be given special rights in the constitution that other groups do not have, and that creating the Voice would divide Australians against each other by race.

    The Progressive No argument was that the voice, a powerless advisory body, was only scraps from the table when what was needed instead was a treaty (unlike NZ, Canada, and the US, Australia and the British before it never made a treaty with Indigenous Australians. The British just declared Australia terra nullius, or "nobody's land", and took it). These treaties in other countries meant little (except in NZ) until the last century when Indigenous rights campaigners won victories in court recognizing them. Australia has had legal cases that have granted limited land rights to Indigenous groups, but in the absence of any treaty, the government's policy towards indigenous people, even after the horrible abuses of the past such as the stolen generations have ended, has been inconsistent, subject to political whims, and often guided by the paternalism and moral panic of the non-indigenous majority rather than the actual needs and concerns of indigenous people themselves.

    The Progressive No camp also argued that approving the voice might signal that indigenous Australians were allowing themselves to be constitutionally recognized in a way that did not acknowledge that indigenous people's sovereignty ever existed, as a treaty would, and therefore was a trojan horse. However, polls from early in the referendum campaign showed overwhelming support from indigenous Australians for the referendum. That support might have slipped over the course of the campaign, but there never was any indication that the Progressive No camp ever represented a majority of Indigenous Australians.

    One thing I've learned is that there is nothing in the Australian constitution that prevents the government from making something illegal for one race only, such as when the Howard Government banned alcohol and pornography in indigenous communities in the Northern Territory in 2007 (among a host of other restrictions, including quarantining welfare payments and acquiring indigenous land) in response to a child sexual abuse scandal in indigenous communities. Racial discrimination laws may prevent this, but those laws have exceptions, which the Howard Government employed, and nothing in the constitution stopped them from doing so. The Leader of the Opposition Peter Dutton, who actively campaigned against the referendum (from the conservative side of course), from early on said that what Indigenous communities "really want" (based on the carefully selected indigenous people who would stand next to him at press conferences) is a crack down on crime and sexual and other abuse of children, so politicians like him haven't changed much. An Australian with a better understanding of your legal system can probably better explain this and correct me if I'm wrong.

    Also, Warren Mundine was an interesting figure in the No Campaign. There were indigenous Australians in both the Conservative No and Progressive No campaign, and Mundine often sounded like a Conservative No campaigner, except for when he said that, assuming Australia would and should vote No, the next day Australians would begin the hard work such as a treaty or changing the date Australia Day (which currently is date of the arrival of the First Fleet, convicts included, to establish the first British settlement in Australia, so Indigenous Australians associate it with colonization and displacement). Needless to say, Peter Dutton other Conservative No campaigners, who are against a Treaty and many of whom had been scaremongering about how a Voice would lead to a Treaty that would take away the land of non-indigenous Australians, were none too enthused about those comments.
  • Gee D wrote: »
    On the general Oz thread, I've posted a strange result. In our electorate, polling booths close to the train line recorded decent Yes majorities. When you move further away though, the No vote becomes the majority. Without being snobbish about it, the areas along the line would be rather better off.


    Just checked: I live on the Wentworth/ Sydney boundary and the yes vote was similar about 65%. Sydney has some considerable pockets of poverty despite gentrification and there is quite an Aboriginal presence in Woolloomooloo public housing.

    Parramatta ( on main western line) had a yes vote of 45%.

  • I am quite pleased with the result as the whole affair had become too political with politicians grandstanding over the whole issue instead of leaving it to the public to decide. The whole issue was too divisive and created a them and us mentality. We were all very pro acknowledging Aboriginals and Torres Strait islanders in the constitution, but the Voice element was a mystery to most voters and it was impossible to get an explanation of it from the powers that be. All very badly handled, a huge waste of money and an unfortunately divisive event.
  • Yes it has shown us up as an irredeemably racist nation, unfortunately
  • Sojourner wrote: »
    Gee D wrote: »
    On the general Oz thread, I've posted a strange result. In our electorate, polling booths close to the train line recorded decent Yes majorities. When you move further away though, the No vote becomes the majority. Without being snobbish about it, the areas along the line would be rather better off.


    Just checked: I live on the Wentworth/ Sydney boundary and the yes vote was similar about 65%. Sydney has some considerable pockets of poverty despite gentrification and there is quite an Aboriginal presence in Woolloomooloo public housing.

    Parramatta ( on main western line) had a yes vote of 45%.

    Further to this: just read that the silvertail electorate of Kooyong ( once a blue -ribbon Liberal bastion in Melbourne) returned a Yes vote of 72%.

    Who’d have thunk it 20 years ago?


  • MiliMili Shipmate
    That's my electorate so I'm happy to hear that. Though like me, not everyone who lives here is wealthy. I'm renting and only recently moved here as there are more apartments here than in the middle ring Eastern suburbs I grew up in and in older buildings so a little cheaper in rent.

    Admittedly I do have a university degree plus post grad teaching and majored in history and anthropology so am fairly well educated about Australian history.

    The polling booth I voted in also voted Yes by about 200 votes, so too bad to the not nice No guy handing out cards there. That electorate is in the balance though, an almost 50/50 vote. I only saw Yes campaigners in Kooyong and Yes signs in people's front yards. Kooyong tends to be conservative economically, but has become socially progressive in recent years.
  • Wentworth ditto
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    I just checked. In our electorate, the Yes vote recorded 46.6, but that does not disclose some finer detail. The Yes vote was significantly higher for those parts of the electorate close to the train line. Further away, in the sort of area where Mr Curly lives (lived?) it was much lower than near us. When you get even further away from the line, the drop was even more.
  • Thanks folks. I've had some feedback and contextual detail from relatives and friends in Australia.

    Sounds complicated.

    I think I can work out what is meant by the 'trainline' but could someone on the ground expand on that for me, please?
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    edited October 2023
    GG - We live in suburban Sydney, serviced by a train line, called the North Shore Line, which runs from the city to suburban Hornsby. Suburbs such as ours are called North Shore suburbs. For much of its journey, the line follows the western edge of a plateau pretty closely. Easy access to the line is sought after and so houses within walking distance fetch a higher price than similar ones further away. Lothlorien's brother lived in the same suburb, but a little bit further from the station.

    Does that help?

  • MiliMili Shipmate
    I'm off work today and just watched the documentary film 'The Last Daughter' about Brenda, an Indigenous woman who was wrongly taken from her family in Western NSW, raised by a loving white family in Sydney, (who believed her to have been neglected) for 5 years and then finally won back by her birth parents. It's a story of pain and trauma, but also hope and reconciliation as Brenda traces her life story and makes sense of her childhood and identity. I highly recommend watching if you are looking for truth telling about Australian history and a story of reconciliation.
  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    "Gee wrote:
    Easy access to the line is sought after and so houses within walking distance fetch a higher price than similar ones further away. Lothlorien's brother lived in the same suburb, but a little bit further from the station.

    "but a little bit further from the station than we do." is what I meant.
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