Article written by tigtog

tigtog (aka Viv) lives in Sydney, Australia: husband, 2 kids, cat, house, garden, just enough wine-racks and (sigh) far too few bookshelves. You can read more about Viv on her bio page.

10 responses to “More on Howard’s Indigenous Emergency Measures”

  1. Andrew Bartlett

    Thanks tigtog

    I don’t want to sound naive – the potential of where this latest policy might go worries me a lot. But we’ve all got to work from where we are at, and look at how best to engage with the debate in a way which maximises the chances of taking it somewhere positive.

    Mr Howard is obviously in the position of most strength, but he doesn’t have total power over where things go.

  2. Andrew Bartlett

    I wasn’t suggesting it’s your intent. Just self-assessing (rather publicly now that I think of it)

  3. Beppie

    Tigtog, I really appreciate the way that you’re covering this issue, your insights are really apposite.

    While I agree with you and Bartlett that even getting this issue on the table is a Good Thing, it does bother me that Howard is getting all the credit for it when so many people– such as Bartlett, and, from what I have heard, Indigenous Women’s groups, have been talking about these problems for years without being heard.

    I was wondering what you think of Howard’s latest comparison between this Indigenous Crisis and Katrina? Clearly, he’s using that comparison to make himself look better politically– he’s responding to our crisis, making him look much more effective than Bush was in reaction to Katrina. It also makes the crisis seem more immediate– as though it is something that has just happened, something that was dropped on these communities like a hurricane, rather than a problem that has been building up for years. Of course, in the case of Katrina, part of the problem had been building for years, in people knew a hurricane of that scale would happen eventually, but did nothing to protect the areas of New Orleans populated dominantly by poor, black people. However, it’s undeniable that the hurricane itself was one single, identifiable cataclysmic event that directly caused the post-Katrina suffering. In the case of abuse in Indigenous communities, there is no single event we can identify, unless it’s January 26th, 1788– but that day does nothing to encapsulate all the abuses that Aboriginal People have faced since then, at the hands of their colonisers. Howard needs this abuse issue to look like a single cataclysmic event, because otherwise, we’re going to have to start looking back at the events that actually initiated the cycles of abuse that plague some of our most marginalised communities– and of course, those events were initiated by white people, both those who were well meaning, and those who were not.

  4. Who do we trust more to Do It Right? at Hoyden About Town

    [...] said this in comments on a previous post regarding the NT Indigenous Emergency Plan, and I want to expand on the theme, as it feels like some electoral scales may have fallen from my [...]

  5. Wallaby

    Framing and reframing Howard’s latest attempt…

    There are other people who have done that more than adequately (tigtog, for example……

  6. I thought this SMH cartoon was a good response to the attempt at “OMG Teh Surprize!” framing:

    Oh, Thoooooooose Aborigines!

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