'My people die young in this country' speech go...

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  • čas přidán 23. 01. 2016
  • "My people die young in this country" - A powerful speech by prominent journalist Stan Grant on indigenous rights in Australia goes viral.

Komentáře • 425

  • @vincentgeoffrey6058
    @vincentgeoffrey6058 Před 4 lety +145

    As a young indigenous bloke from desert N.T, I've never heard a speech so powerful. Onya Stan, us young fellas will continue your voice as indigenous people 👊🏽✊🏾👍🏽🤠

  • @paulcraft8524
    @paulcraft8524 Před 4 lety +46

    Uncle Stan jingerri jingerri my brother man, you are so deadly keep up your great work you are a legend.

  • @BluthBoy1
    @BluthBoy1 Před 3 lety +72

    This is one of the most powerful speeches in modern Australian history. Stan Grant is a man of honesty, integrity and courage. Keep pushing for the relevance of the past and hope for the future. You are a true Australia hero.

    • @straitarrow5784
      @straitarrow5784 Před rokem +1

      If he believed what he is ranting he would be helping his people in remote regions.

    • @memine3704
      @memine3704 Před rokem

      Stan Grant is FOS. A professional victim, liar and activist. A hypocrite of massive proportions.

    • @serenaclampert4797
      @serenaclampert4797 Před 9 měsíci

      😢❤Thanks Stan your egotism and self righteous rants convinced people to vote NO in the referendum.

  • @bigdoggy4744
    @bigdoggy4744 Před 5 lety +109

    As a Aboriginal man I know the history of my country I know how rasicm slowly wears away your dignity and self respect I was born at a time when aparthied was the norm. I was made a state ward for no other reason than I was Aboriginal I was seperated from my sibilings for going on 8 years. I have experienced the police who thought because I was a boong I was a thief a drunk and deserved the beatings they gave out. I have experienced family and friends commit suicide because they could no longer take the abuse meted out by a racist goverment and white citizens. I suffer from PTSD and have fone for twenty years. I do not blame all white Australians for my plight nor do I expect apologies. Unlike many self appointed Aborignal community leaders I do not want nor expect compensation for the wrongs that have been committed.
    For me there is no point to compensation money or something in kind cannot give me back the years I suffered in the institutions and cannot give me the years that I missed out on with my sibilings who were farmed out to other institutions. Nor can any form of compensation take away the panic attacks and the nightmares that are part of my life. I look forward to a future where racism and intolerance are no longer accepted for any race. This seems to be a long way off but I have waited for over 60 years I may not be here when the creed of all men are created equal and deserve equal treatment comes about the creator will have taken me to be with my ancestors. Still I have great faith in my fellow man and know that good will eventually overcome evil regardless of what form it takes.

    • @jhopsi
      @jhopsi Před 5 lety +6

      I am sorry for what you were put through. I have family members who were put through the same thing. Stolen generation on both sides. I hope with time you find some peace within yourself. I suffer from PTSD for different reasons.. but I still understand It's such a hard thing to cope with. Wishing you well from your Koori sis.

    • @bigdoggy4744
      @bigdoggy4744 Před 5 lety +3

      @@jhopsi I appreciate your feedback sis I hope that you find away through the PTSD it is a struggle I know. I also feel for your family members that were stolen. I am sure the creator will keep you and yours safe. Yours in the struggle for truth justice and the black fella way. Ed

    • @JordanPAT
      @JordanPAT Před 5 lety

      Nothing can wear you down unless you let it. You are not a victim but a powerful dreamer, a creator. Use the negativity to strengthen your soul. Remember, only those who are hurting hurt others.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +2

      Respect. Thank you for sharing your story.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +6

      D 'nothing can wear you down unless you let it' - tell that to a starving person... tell that to someone out in the snow with no shelter... tell that to someone who is forced to live without their culture, their language or their home and has no possible means to reclaim it

  • @carolinehaf21
    @carolinehaf21 Před 4 lety +16

    True then, remains true today. Australia, we must be better than this.

  • @epelitikoinavunimolidelait3645

    I just could not hold back my tears when listening to this very powerful, honest, courageous speeches in this modern Australian history. Aboriginal people continue to advocate on this worse of the world's history and ensure to eradicate racism here in Australia. Thank you so much Stan for being bold and couragerous in publicly presented the truth! Nobody can cover up the Truth, the Truth will always prevails and set everyone Free!

  • @jerryberry5480
    @jerryberry5480 Před 3 lety +9

    Anyone here from Year 12 English as Second Language?

    • @chris_1103
      @chris_1103 Před 3 lety

      This was my a level exam today

    • @bigman1835
      @bigman1835 Před 3 lety

      We did this in year 8 english

  • @JohnSmith-to5ow
    @JohnSmith-to5ow Před 8 lety +16

    Amazing fucking speech.

  • @gaylemorris1995
    @gaylemorris1995 Před 2 lety +3

    Stan you are one of our hero's with a articulate voice. Thank you for your for your well educated worldly education you articulate our issues world issues better than anyone. Thank you Stan

  • @EhsanTabbouch
    @EhsanTabbouch Před 8 lety +23

    well Stan ,I know exactly how you feel and I admire you the more for speaking your heart out. My people in Syria going through the same thing right now,been killed , raped,forced out of their homes and their country, their houses and land bombed or burned and worst of all ,they're been replaced by other people and so changing the demographic nature of the whole country so one person who call himself a leader can stay in power and the world is just watching . like you I am an Australian , been so for 43 years and proud to belong to this wonderful country we all call home, but I wish racism and sectarianism well stop so we all can live in peace

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you Ehsan. I share the same wish. May we all live side by side, with shared values and a deep appreciation and respect for each others culture.

    • @julieritchie3373
      @julieritchie3373 Před 2 lety

      No aboriginals are NOT going thru what Syrians are experiencing.They are not being killed, raped, forced out of their homes., replaced by 'others'- denied freedom. There is no comparison. They live in a democracy! Do some research and find the truth for yourself.

  • @geeuwhycarrah305
    @geeuwhycarrah305 Před 4 lety +11

    I love you Stan Grant, you are the AUSTRALIAN DREAM. WE CAN ALL BE BETTER THAN THAT

  • @shannonsutherland2450
    @shannonsutherland2450 Před 3 lety +3

    STAN GRANT: YOU ARE AN ABSOLUTE HERO 👍👍👍

  • @user-vp5py5eo8x
    @user-vp5py5eo8x Před 4 lety +53

    I can't believe the amount of dislikes this has gotten, disgusting.

    • @lawratify
      @lawratify Před 3 lety +2

      Lachlan I am not surprised by the number of "dislikes" here. After all some find bliss in blindness, apathy and denials. And many of them are devoid of any Conscience, Compassion or empathy, the most important attributes that set humans apart from the rest of the animals. They are trapped in the lowest state of human consciousness, the "fight or flight" or animal consciousness. They are not fully fledged humans but SUB-HUMANS and find it embarrassing to concede that they are the ultimate beneficiaries of the grotesque racism and violent bigotry people like them inflicted on the Indigenous people.

    • @basedbattledroid3507
      @basedbattledroid3507 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah unfortunately we have a lot of racists in Australia, they're a bigger problem than the spiders and snakes. I should know; I grew up with a white supremacist dad, and if it wasn't for my own personal experiences in life; I would probably still believe the absolute crap he used to tell me, spent more than eight years trying to convince me they were a blight, telling me who I could and couldn't be friends with in the neighborhood and that they were worse than animals. Utter bullshit.
      Unfortunately there are many here that are like him, they're unabashedly proud of their hatred and willful ignorance, they treat the land they occupy and its traditional owners with such outright disrespect and negligence, they carry around this undeserved sense of entitlement, when they're in a more relaxed mood they'll act like stubborn, condescending, manipulative snobs, usually because their deep-seated insecurities have convinced them that everyone else secretly does that to them behind their backs, and most commonly; they use anger as a means to accomplish basically everything they set out to do.
      People reward angry behavior all of the time, whether they intend to or not. People sit back and do nothing any time they encounter an angry person, either because they're afraid of getting hurt/someone they care about getting hurt or they simply believe someone else will step up and do the right thing, absolving them of responsibility if anything goes wrong (bystander effect).
      People will move the angry forward in a queue if they throw a hissy fit, people won't speak up against them saying something if they shout it with enough venomous fury, and if they start throwing punches; people don't want to be on the other end of them, it only teaches the angry person that their behavior is right and it will let them have everything they want, it doesn't teach them how to co-operate with others or control their impulses.
      As much as I love this country; anger and disrespect is rife here, anyone talking about us being easygoing compared to the rest of the world is a bloody idiot. Even as we've recently become more tolerant of other ethnic demographics, LGBT+ people and others; there is still such a remorseless hatred of indigenous people that continues to plague us, and even all of the people who boast about their own tolerance and acceptance of others will tend to ignore issues affecting indigenous australians.
      On that note; I should also mention disabled people are treated like shit here too, not with the same level of vitriol or historical significance as indigenous people, though there are some similarities such as police brutality, workplace discrimination, employers refusing to take their applications, forced to deal with irritating bureaucratic obstacles just to have barely enough money for food, although without a doubt indigenous Australians experience the worst levels of discrimination in Australia.
      Of course, it's a bigger and more complicated issue than just people being angry, there are institutions that have supported racism that are older than any living Australian, yet they only came to a close fairly recently, I mean there are still generations of aboriginal people alive today who were taken from their families as children and sent to live in missionaries where they were abused, forced to abandon their culture, whilst still not receiving the same respect a white person did even after doing everything they were made to do, that's only a small part of the story surrounding the stolen generations.
      There are also corporate interests such as mining companies that don't have any consideration for indigenous ceremonial sites of historical importance and cultural significance, places that had been preserved by the traditional owners of the land for hundreds of thousands of years, I mean people would be outraged across the world if Rio Tinto blew up the Great Pyramid of Giza, but when they destroyed an aboriginal site that has been dated as even older than the pyramids; they weren't even liable to compensate them for the damage. Not to mention the development of many casinos and bottle shops in aboriginal communities.
      And there was a lot of genocide too, sadly there are no full-blooded indigenous Australians left alive today, the last surviving one was Truganini. Every indigenous person alive today has some degree of European ancestry due to a mix of government initiatives designed to make indigenous people more like the europeans and many massacres that have taken place almost immediately after colonization of the land.
      I don't know when things will improve but there is a lot of work that still has to be done from all of us, though progress has been made if people like Stan Grant can speak freely of their experiences and Eddie Mabo could win the historic land claim case. I don't know if I will ever live to see it, but I like to think one day indigenous Australians will be treated with the respect they've been denied for so long and they won't be living in the harmful conditions they've had to live in due to their perceived collective socioeconomic status.
      As I see it; any Australians who hate the traditional owners of the land, and actively work to harm them, have no right to call themselves Australians, they should bugger off back to England.

  • @DaevorTheDevoted
    @DaevorTheDevoted Před 4 lety +8

    The lack of empathy portrayed by some of the comments is a sad testimony to how unconscionable humans can be.

  • @trudymills-evers8998
    @trudymills-evers8998 Před 8 lety +14

    The truth should be told more often . This is the truth and thank you Stan Grant for telling it!.

  • @JThos99
    @JThos99 Před 4 lety +9

    I am confused and have been so for more than 33 years! My first encounter with an Australian was the white wife of an American GI (likely WWII like my father). I had chosen an aisle seat due to pregnancy in the 1980s. They and a little white girl had taken the row. When I asked to claim my seat, she incited a literal mob of other whites on the flight to bash me with everything from racism to religion. I would not back down, and told her that it was my country, not hers and the church crowd that no, they needed to go to church. Her husband nor the girl said anything. A black family of three that was boarding when this took place was terrified. The attendants intervened and verified my seat. Upon landing, some hecklers continued. A few decades before on the ground, I could have been lynched like Mary Turner of Valdosta, GA.
    Fast forward to 1999, the Child Migrants Trust held its 1st International Congress in America. I was the only Catholic known to have attended from the archdiocese, despite the event being open to all and clergy being invited. I learned that both the Holy See and the Church of England were not so strange bedfellows in the former once controlling slavery to the latter also being involved in African slavery and both in enslaving children through migration schemes throughout the British Commonwealth for centuries. There I met most of the survivors that appeared on news stories worldwide. I had wanted to know about their lives as a Mother and educator.
    I am puzzled as to how and why some white Australians accept people of color in and from other parts of the world, yet not their own First Australian citizens. This was evident during WWII when black GIs from the USA recounted the camaraderie of Diggers despite official segregation orders from American and Australian entities. Another curious factor I remember well is that anthropologists classified both First Australians and Polynesians as "Caucasian" while they were treated as anything other than human in many cases. I must end this essay with how as recent as the mid-2000s, a Pug rescue peer of ours in the Deep South and her sister in a nearby city to hers had girls from AUS as exchange students. They were friendly and receptive to blacks here in America, seemingly. The more affluent one was so dismissive of First Australians that she removed the cultural and cuisine leaves from identical binders I had made for my daughter and one each for them since they missed a full "home economics" course in either country. The mango chutney we ordered for them to enjoy during Thanksgiving was welcome, but including their own country's First Australian contributions to their education was not. Go figure. Cheers to mankind!

    • @lawratify
      @lawratify Před 3 lety +1

      J Thos Some are not fully fledged human beings with a Conscience, Compassion or Empathy, the most important attributes that set humans apart from the rest of the animals. The people who inflicted so much pain and suffering to Indigenous people like you are/ were trapped in the lowest state of human consciousness, the "fight or flight" or animal consciousness. In Australia and in other parts of the world there are still sadly people languishing in the LOWEST STATE OR ANIMAL CONSCIOUSNESS.

  • @TheKkeswani
    @TheKkeswani Před 8 lety +10

    Stan you MUST join the politics. Please. You CAN and you WILL make a difference.

    • @osmang7401
      @osmang7401 Před 5 lety +1

      if he joins politics, he will be very limited to what he can say, Stuff politics, politicians are hypicrites.

  • @jadevanvoss2399
    @jadevanvoss2399 Před 3 lety +7

    Bravo Stan, It disgusts me how the rhetoric around Indigenous Australians still widely circulate. Praying for a more compassionate and effective reconciliation.

  • @nnyv0040
    @nnyv0040 Před 3 lety +18

    A moving speech that touched me deeply. Thank you.

  • @777palena
    @777palena Před 8 lety +19

    A Great Speech, Thanks! Stan.

    • @jondohnson5538
      @jondohnson5538 Před 8 lety

      +777palena Boooooooo Boooooooooooo propaganda and bullshit!

  • @kimharris2599
    @kimharris2599 Před 3 lety +2

    In hearing this speech I revert to a 1967. & 1968 report Wentworth and Dawkins.
    In those Government reports it identified the causation and effect to why Aboriginal people all over Australian Nations were dying young. Yet 50 to 60 years later research continued to repeat research whilst my people continued to die young.
    Why delibrite cultural genocide.
    Even today although the government knowingly are aware of Aboriginal life expectancy we still have to wait beyond our life expectancy to get our super.
    Yes , social gaps are closing and as a nation we are now working gradually together but the fact remains Aboriginal people continue to die younger .

  • @pdias8469
    @pdias8469 Před 3 lety +4

    Stan Grant your speech is etched deeply in my core.

  • @GL-ys8je
    @GL-ys8je Před 8 lety +3

    Christianity at it finest.Thou shalt not steal,Thou shalt not murder,thou shalt not use the lords name in vain.

  • @JT-fn4eu
    @JT-fn4eu Před 3 lety +3

    Stan used to be a white fulla ! What happened?

  • @urbanhyena4063
    @urbanhyena4063 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm an ally - and that's in every conversation I have with people when the topic comes up. I don't care if people feel uncomfortable when i bring it up, but this message is important for all of us.

  • @osmang7401
    @osmang7401 Před 5 lety +17

    The truth always pierces the heart.

    • @shadowsoul720
      @shadowsoul720 Před 4 lety

      Not always, but in this case I suppose so

  • @mohammedessa29
    @mohammedessa29 Před 8 lety +13

    it's the brutal truth that America set this precedent, we have to acknowledge what happened to native Americans and abroginals is the biggest injustice that ever occurred. we need to help them

    • @NemosHusbandswife
      @NemosHusbandswife Před 8 lety

      +mohammed essa Gtfo of America.

    • @mohammedessa29
      @mohammedessa29 Před 8 lety +3

      +liaqat Ally what do you mean Anglo Jew? anti Semitism a disease my friend of your soul

    • @mohammedessa29
      @mohammedessa29 Před 8 lety +3

      +liaqat Ally very wrong sir, very wrong, my brother I will die with these words, but real Jews the people of the torah, the liberal Jews are allies against racism and fascism, they behind the scene fight for the rights of coloured people and minorities. Jews are my family

    • @roseadams8003
      @roseadams8003 Před 3 lety

      But it’s considered condescending to HELP people.

  • @Flynja1
    @Flynja1 Před 3 lety +1

    why are there so many dislikes. This is probably my favourite speech. A neglected part of Australian history which in Australian education isn't even taught much at all.

    • @bellamckinnon8655
      @bellamckinnon8655 Před 3 lety

      I think a number of people have their minds closed to the ideas and experiences of others. You could call it racism, but I don’t know that for sure. Good speech. Impactful.

    • @Flynja1
      @Flynja1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@bellamckinnon8655 I agree with your first sentence but I think it is quite factual that what is discussed is racism.

    • @bellamckinnon8655
      @bellamckinnon8655 Před 3 lety

      @@Flynja1 Of course, I mean the people in the comments who aren't receiving it well. I don't know if it's because they're racist, just don't like Stan Grant or whatever.

    • @Flynja1
      @Flynja1 Před 3 lety

      @@bellamckinnon8655 I see, sorry my dude.

  • @vviv7230
    @vviv7230 Před 2 lety +3

    Stan Grant intelligent and balanced reporter. There many brilliant indigenous Australians, that contributed greatly to this land Australia. The high profile indigenous people that come to my mind are, Albert Namijra, Neville Bonner, John Newfong, Charles Perkins, just to name a few greats.
    These people not only added intelligence, creativity, but added wonderful colourful surroundings in our Australian life.
    There minds were colourful, they added that extra bit of soul and spirit to all our future to come and Stan Grant does that for us.

  • @marnierose7816
    @marnierose7816 Před 7 lety +3

    I have never heard better or truer words! Its time for all Australians to stand against those leaders who still evict the native peoples from their land! #I stand with our native peoples#

    • @johnnysteradactyl558
      @johnnysteradactyl558 Před rokem

      You can have your land, it's your culture some don't want.
      The endless drama.
      The lies.
      The manipulation.
      The omissions.
      Your vendetta against people who had nothing. Not a cent. While your family was doing what? Remind us.
      The violence.
      The family violence.
      The drinking.
      More lies.
      The jealousy of anyone who might actually want to care for their family or others in general.
      You kick your own people when their down and it's vile.
      So, by all means, keep your land because it's your culture many don't want.

    • @johnnysteradactyl558
      @johnnysteradactyl558 Před rokem

      Oh, and the false witnessing - just like some white folk.

  • @stephmakeslyrics4982
    @stephmakeslyrics4982 Před 6 lety +40

    more dislikes than likes.
    that's sad.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +9

      This is what we're up against, and absolutely proves Stan's point.

    • @crimstarg2465
      @crimstarg2465 Před 4 lety +8

      Shows the true white Australian culture

    • @bellamckinnon8655
      @bellamckinnon8655 Před 4 lety +12

      Jesus Christ...white Australia has a black history whether some of us like it or not. Very sad to see this kind of negative response to the truth. Very disappointed.

    • @shadowsoul720
      @shadowsoul720 Před 4 lety +1

      @@bellamckinnon8655 I think it was because some people wanted too hear about positive change and how to correct the future. Which isn't to say that this is a bad thing, just sends a different perceived message.

    • @Wings91
      @Wings91 Před 4 lety +5

      The likes outweigh the dislikes at the time of this comment, Should be no dislikes at all. Where's the respect fellow Australians?

  • @vinceoconnor9898
    @vinceoconnor9898 Před rokem +1

    I've never been a strong supporter of Stan and I can't really identify why that is the case, I hope it's not racially based but in my darkest history it might be. I can recall the "shaming" of Stan and Tracey Holmes when their relationship was exposed, inappropriate was the subliminal innuendo. Wow, after watching this powerful dissertation, I owe Stan an apology. In a little over 8 minutes he has made me discard my bias, whatever its origin. Thanks Stan.

  • @kaiservoldemort4385
    @kaiservoldemort4385 Před 4 lety +3

    Good speech.

  • @thisredcat2819
    @thisredcat2819 Před 3 lety +3

    Thank you Stan
    You are a true Patriot .
    I thank you for your balanced views on
    Truthful realities and your empathetic vision to our future .
    Thank you for making Australians realize our place in Asia and Pacific as a good Neighbour and Trading partner to :
    China
    Indonesia
    India
    Philippines
    Burma
    Malaysia etc
    Our Neighbours who threw of the dark cloud of European Colonialism and Racism ..
    Let’s all improve our societies and prosper together !

  • @EMINADO.1.11
    @EMINADO.1.11 Před 4 lety +3

    The World is a terrible place.

  • @milly2750
    @milly2750 Před 6 lety

    Really well said! I think a lot of people in these comments could do with a bit of a reality check; this speech is not about making you feel guilty, it is about making you realise why the situation is how it is today. Trying to say that we should just forget it ('it was 200 years ago, right?') is exactly like saying that there is no point learning about the holocaust. I mean, it is just mind-boggling to me that someone could even suggest that what he is talking about is just nagging, essentially degrading the aboriginals history and existence to nothing. Kudos to Stan Grant for a powerful and well executed speech.

  • @kyemcintosh2580
    @kyemcintosh2580 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm so glad to be a young wiradjuri men 🖤💛♥️

  • @outfromdawoodwork
    @outfromdawoodwork Před 3 lety +2

    Yeah.... deadly fella ✊🏿✊🏾✊🏽

  • @dukkman010
    @dukkman010 Před 7 měsíci

    Two elders in my family cracked 85 .

  • @panaphatpamano1963
    @panaphatpamano1963 Před rokem +1

    This is a great speech man for real, but I wonder what this kind of speech is called, an Informative?

  • @mickjenks88
    @mickjenks88 Před 6 lety +7

    50 shades of stan

  • @bronwyndeegan1022
    @bronwyndeegan1022 Před 2 lety

    Like Mr Stan said as Australians all let us rejoice.

  • @morganhillier6976
    @morganhillier6976 Před 8 lety +1

    My country Canada, still faces many issues like this. An un proportional aboriginal population in our prisons, extremely high suicide rates for aboriginal young, and in some provinces, the child poverty rate for aboriginal children is around 60%.
    We are a nation recovering from our past.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety

      There are many parallels between Canada and Australia on this score. Canada's population has however embraced change and I believe that the average Canadian is now far for culturally aware and respectful of the Canadian Aboriginal People than they used to be, whereas in Australia we still display massive amounts of racism and cultural ignorance with the Australian mainstream community and within our institutions. It is changing. But it has been a very slow process and as a result the Aboriginal People bash their heads against the brick wall of racism on a daily basis.

    • @trentlandon9033
      @trentlandon9033 Před 2 lety

      Only solution is bringing more and more non white people to Australia and Canada

  • @outfromdawoodwork
    @outfromdawoodwork Před 3 lety +6

    I’m lost for words! Absolutely brilliant!

  • @GTRyan35
    @GTRyan35 Před 5 lety +6

    Quite a few Aussie Nazis coming out in the comments too. And a few casual racists doing the standard reverse racism claim.
    We are really pathetic. Only people from places who have actually been through hell (obliteration by war, extermination or holocaust) can really give an opinion on humanity.

  • @RockyRooster1969
    @RockyRooster1969 Před 2 lety

    Stan grant you need your own CZcams channel brother I’ll would definitely subscribe

  • @AlmaSdance
    @AlmaSdance Před 8 lety +4

    Charles Dickens saying that?! I'm so disappointed. It seems very few true souls walked this earth

    • @JThos99
      @JThos99 Před 4 lety

      Namaste. No surprise! He was also disparaging of people of African descent and diaspora, as was General William T. Sherman (anti-secession yet pro-slavery). I mention them because regardless of Dickens being from poor family and Sherman losing his father as a boy, their childhood plights were eclipsed by embracing white supremacy and "Social Darwinism" mindsets as adults. Sherman was also a friend of Nathan Bedford Forrest, who grew up poor and fatherless to become a rich slaveowner, massacre leader and KKK founder. The author and Union general are my birthday week boys in like Bob Marley, who championed all people period, and I am not a Rastafarian.

  • @sondradupree8709
    @sondradupree8709 Před rokem +1

    In 2023 , Stan has become Chocolate brown . In 1995 he was white.

  • @seamusmurphy8546
    @seamusmurphy8546 Před 8 lety +4

    This guy obviously has some white roots yet he is blaming all white people... Smh...

    • @jamesglenn4266
      @jamesglenn4266 Před 6 lety +2

      Seamus, all of these Aboriginal activists have white blood in them. That's the hypocrisy of it all.

    • @SuperDecdog
      @SuperDecdog Před 2 měsíci

      @@jamesglenn4266that would of course be because they were raped and removed from their homes

  • @CursoryMercenary
    @CursoryMercenary Před 5 lety +12

    Says Stan Grant who dumped his aboriginal wife with his 3 kids for a white Australian woman

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +2

      Totally irrelevant. And racist.

    • @kanesanders6669
      @kanesanders6669 Před 4 lety +3

      We're talking about official government policies over the last 230 years that have resulted in genocide, intergenerational trauma as a result of at least a hundred thousand children being stolen from their families, education policies that denied young Aboriginal people a proper education and therefore employment opportunities; and you think that Stan Grant's marriage breakdown is relevant. YOU FLOG!

  • @jondohnson5538
    @jondohnson5538 Před 8 lety +1

    TTFD. Nuff said!

    • @kanesanders6669
      @kanesanders6669 Před 4 lety +1

      Thiamine Tetrahydrofurfuryl Disulfide? To The Faithful Departed? I give up.

  • @greg-sb7wx
    @greg-sb7wx Před 7 dny +1

    What is the theme of this poem?

  • @elaineswan2032
    @elaineswan2032 Před 6 lety

    Well said Stan- thank you for standing up and speaking out the truth when others are unable to speak about all the many issues current and past - To the
    negative comments and people - It's that nego attitude ignorance disrespectful and who cares followers- are the cause of all our problems in this world..facts are facts people - teach the truth in our schools about what really happened in Australian history.. If all that history is taught in our schools .. Why not teach the Dang truth ., oh my life .,
    I love all people from all countries n all cultures But the truth is the truth AaandTo also mention-Facts - Alcohol , preservatives , chemicals etc etc etc .. Was brought in to this country bbbyyy. Wwwhhhoomm?? Aboriginals lived off the lands happily and peacefully .. The least foreigners could have done was to keep the peace , live Toooggeether in peace side by side ..
    And Yes we have evolved stronger as a nation But !!We Must come together, stop racialism, help black people as well as white but all people , equal opportunity to all in all states of Australia , stop the stereo typing aboriginals black people in general .. Aboriginals are awesome people ..
    People need to be more respectful to the indigenous race and culture of all countries ..
    To say we are Australians should mean in a literal term -Equality for a United Country Not in wordsIn Action
    Peace

  • @rock1140
    @rock1140 Před 5 lety +14

    I don't understand why he is not Australian Prime Minister. He speaks more truth 8 minutes then any Australian politician in there whole term of office. Then again being Prime Minister will limit him to what he can say and do so maybe it's better he stays as a journalist because they speak the truth.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety

      I'm waiting for the day! STAN FOR PM! :)

  • @anthonyproctor5104
    @anthonyproctor5104 Před rokem +1

    Great speech from a guy who was cheating on his wife and children. Such a top guy.

  • @smurfzilla5756
    @smurfzilla5756 Před rokem

    I just watched this and i had a look for what was said and i cant find where it was said that they were marched to sydney. I also could not find where it say war of extermination. Please help

  • @patriciaishiguchi7644
    @patriciaishiguchi7644 Před 2 lety +2

    Powerful words 🖤💛❤️

  • @shadowsoul720
    @shadowsoul720 Před 4 lety +2

    I didn't know what to expect. It was a little more confrontational than I expected, and more passionate... almost to a flaw, but yet there seems to be a direct message of seriousness that Stan was trying to transfer to his audience. And I think that is why he did this talk so forcibly. It isn't (in my opinion) the right way to make change occur, but it can confront people to the harsh realities of the Aboriginal culture.

    • @taylahclarke9144
      @taylahclarke9144 Před 4 lety +9

      I agree with what you said, except it's not Aboriginal culture. It's the Aboriginal experience, in a Western imperial culture that colonised their lands and illegalised their culture. I wish we could learn more about Aboriginal people and their traditional customs, they are the oldest suriving civilisation and yet it sometimes feels like they only exist in Australia in relation to white people.

  • @alexcandy1246
    @alexcandy1246 Před 5 lety +3

    The like to dislike ratio in this video alone shows the sheer amount of racism still present in our society today this is honestly embracing as a country that we cant be "better than that"

  • @tinman205
    @tinman205 Před rokem

    Presstitutes Is what Mr. Stan Grant is...

  • @vivianchetty7477
    @vivianchetty7477 Před 2 lety

    Stan Grant for PM.

  • @mollyjoshi5508
    @mollyjoshi5508 Před 4 lety +3

    Well spoken Stan . Could we have a National Repentance Day when all people of Australia especially political and community leaders & spiritual leaders can say sorry openly to one another and wash each other’s feet.

    • @thinkingallowed7042
      @thinkingallowed7042 Před rokem

      🤦🏻‍♀️😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆🐂💩🤡

  • @jacintomausoco715
    @jacintomausoco715 Před 7 lety

    Great speech and let this uneducated people know the reality that happened before and still exists now with Aboriginal people the real owners of this beautiful land

    • @cr1mz075
      @cr1mz075 Před 6 lety +1

      Jacinto Mausoco but they didn't own the land they didn't believe in ownership of it.

    • @emp731
      @emp731 Před 6 lety

      The Land owns YOU..When you die,you return to the land...That’s why we say,ashes to ashes,dust to dust.For all of us...Eventually.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety

      @@cr1mz075 If we deleted every comment here that contained a cultural misunderstanding then this entire comments section would be mostly empty. I cannot speak for any Aboriginal person, but from what I know from some of the Aboriginal Elders I have met, INTENT matters. I believe that the majority of Aboriginal people reading Jacinta's comment would forgive her for not quite understanding the cultural complexities of Aboriginal worldview, and would instead deeply appreciate her sentiment. What is your intention/motivation for being here?

  • @bbcnnstupimedia1071
    @bbcnnstupimedia1071 Před 8 lety +1

    Very good speech!!!
    Australia should recognized Right of Native - Australoid,
    not fake native, Austronesian.

  • @R_B69
    @R_B69 Před 8 lety +2

    After all that. He didn't give us a way to fix it.

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +1

      Because it would be disrespectful to do so. All discussions about reconciliation should happen with individual language groups or Aboriginal Countries (within Australia) and should be done in consultation with that Country's Elders. Stan cannot speak for over 400 Aboriginal language groups - it is not his place to do so.

  • @competitivec4t243
    @competitivec4t243 Před 3 lety

    why is my video buffering at the old ladies

  • @cocobunitacobuni8738
    @cocobunitacobuni8738 Před rokem

    Good christians 👏no wonder my Afrikaners feel so happy in Australia.

  • @chingchee3876
    @chingchee3876 Před 2 měsíci

    Stan is all talk and no action.

  • @donniebuss6291
    @donniebuss6291 Před 2 lety

    And NOW!! Not Much has Changed!! SHAME!!!

  • @eyesonsportz
    @eyesonsportz Před 2 lety

    Great man

  • @openyoureyes3308
    @openyoureyes3308 Před 8 lety +3

    native hate is the norm. in all the world ... do u know the laws that inpower this hate? got land thank a native!

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety

      Right on the money. All racism is fuelled by the greedy need to hoard resources.

  • @rachelgarcia8496
    @rachelgarcia8496 Před 6 lety

    LORD Jesus I Prayer We Don't UP Give Power and Your right Each one's Us Stay Together Must Love children Family, Friend around World In 🇦🇺 Australia, 🇵🇭 Philippines, 🗺 🙏Keep Prayer 💏 safe.. In place to Be safe Enviroment countries..
    Words out Your Mouth Shout UP Don't Talk Go Away.. Talking lying Truth Speak out.. Create Big mistakes made by Social Workers Criminal...

  • @tendaichidzikwe6328
    @tendaichidzikwe6328 Před 2 lety +2

    Well said Stan.
    I wish they will cover a bit more on the indeginous and first nations is the school curricula.
    I think the more we learn and talk about the history the earlier everyone starts healing

  • @rafaelmoreno9597
    @rafaelmoreno9597 Před rokem

    Stan Grant.... Words can't explain just how resounding this speech is to me. Thank you for speaking so very powerfully from year heart.

  • @Mal_1908
    @Mal_1908 Před 4 lety +1

    The dislike/like ratio is congruent with Stan's words. The Australian Dream - circa 2020.

  • @pfb6388
    @pfb6388 Před 4 lety

    When this country becomes a Republic Stan Grant should be Australia's first President! The first WILL happen, the second SHOULD happen.

  • @ForeverBennett
    @ForeverBennett Před rokem

    Stan could be PM. I'd vote for him.

    • @saintsone7877
      @saintsone7877 Před rokem

      Sorry, but a PM needs to respect all citizens and Stan hates anyone who is not Aboriginal whether he would admit that to your face or not. He is a racist.

    • @saintsone7877
      @saintsone7877 Před rokem

      @Onslow Sorry, but a person who deliberately lies, becomes informed that the statement he made was a lie and was shown the proof it was a lie and continues to make the statement Onslow is NOT fit to be PM. Nor does he do Aboriginal People justice but claiming to represent them when he has never been selected by anyone to represent Aboriginal People politically.
      Pointing out truths and facts is never racist my friend. Lying and creating division based on lies is racist and Stan wins that guernsey hands down.

    • @saintsone7877
      @saintsone7877 Před rokem

      @Onslow Onslow, please show me where Aboriginal people were EVER under the Flora and Fauna Act that Stan falsely states on a regular basis. Until then stop trying to lecture/shut me up if you are unaware of real facts.

    • @saintsone7877
      @saintsone7877 Před rokem

      @Onslow And you are better are you Onslow for supporting a man who lies and has been proven a liar. Pointing that fact out makes me a racist does it? I do not disrespect the indigenous people, he does by lying to them and others about the past. I will not defend any facts relating to abuse of Aboriginals in the past but I will stand up against liars Onslow. And as stated earlier that is neither disrespectful nor racist. Truth is never racist my friend.

    • @saintsone7877
      @saintsone7877 Před rokem

      @Onslow Expected such a poor response Onslow. YOU obviously know his statement is a lie but refuse to accept it. You also know the Indigenous people were NEVER under the Flaura and Fauna Act and therefore you cannot produce any evidence to support that erroneous claim by Grant and others. Maybe you need to re-learn the history of Australia my friend and not the re-written history Stan uses.
      And NO Onslow, I am not having a go at any Aboriginal person other than Grant and his lying friends who are a very, very small number sir. You are the one projecting your inability to protect your lying idol to throw counter claims against me that you have ZERO evidence of. Calling out a liar is not racist and the fact you attempt to say it is shows who the real racist in this conversation is my friend. Sadly, it is you who needs to look in the mirror not I.

  • @janetrosskelly
    @janetrosskelly Před 8 lety +5

    Stan grant you are a legend !! Australia is very racist to their Indigenous people and it will unfortunately always be until the REAL HISTORY of this country is taught in schools !! Racism has killed the "so called" Australian dream.

    • @cr1mz075
      @cr1mz075 Před 6 lety

      Janet Rosskelly you know it is taught in schools right so far I've had to learn about it three years in a row. It's required that we learn about all the bad things the white man did.

  • @sondradupree8709
    @sondradupree8709 Před 8 měsíci

    ❤ most of what Stanley says in this rant is total fiction. He makes it up as he goes along.

  • @distone1082
    @distone1082 Před 6 lety +11

    Let's squash racism!

  • @0000bling
    @0000bling Před 8 lety

    powerful

  • @Igzia.B
    @Igzia.B Před 6 lety

    Public : "Whot? Did he just say Fuck off ! to all of us. He got the nice suit, what more does he want that strange blackfella ? "

    • @warwicklewis8735
      @warwicklewis8735 Před 6 lety

      AL PHA "black fella" slightly of white at most.

    • @Igzia.B
      @Igzia.B Před 6 lety

      No waay, I can tell a black fella when I hear one and this mate knows what he is talking about.

  • @Astrostevo
    @Astrostevo Před 5 lety +3

    Truth. Deadly. Respect.

  • @ramboman2064
    @ramboman2064 Před 6 lety +4

    got a point

  • @premravindranath4519
    @premravindranath4519 Před rokem

    Every time when I hear the atrocities done in the name of civilisation on the real Land owners (aboriginal), the First Nation people my blood just boils.. So much of cruelty and inhuman behaviour by the so called civilised. The tenacity of occupying lands and using muscle power(military) to crush the seemingly naive people is appalling.. Yet these so called savages have far more decency than the occupiers.. So much of supremacy attitude is it because of your colour?? Colour will fade away what would remain is your actions and the choices you have made.. Do not be so proud of your colour that will vanish in thin air one day!! if you have remorse give back the respect and the life which the people of First Nation deserve which you sinfully took away..

  • @marijanaberam5599
    @marijanaberam5599 Před rokem

    My God almighty
    God bless you Stan never stop because people are with you

  • @lee-annebarrett366
    @lee-annebarrett366 Před 9 měsíci

    Has stan been out into the center of Australia to help indigenous Australians. He complains and complains but has he gone out and helped his own people in the way of education, health or is he an armchair advocate, that complains but does nothing. Jacinta Price gets out there to help, she lives in these communities. Would stan give up his privileged lifestyle and live where she lives to advocate for his own people. Dont think so, he has take up a privileged role at a University.

  • @zarli8018
    @zarli8018 Před 6 lety +18

    that’s my cousin

  • @mariahrecablanca
    @mariahrecablanca Před 2 lety

    It makes me angry how ca those people in power at that time could do something so in humane :(

  • @plusplusplusplusp
    @plusplusplusplusp Před 2 lety +1

    Stan Grant is a legend. Voice, truth and treaty NOW.

  • @randomanimeshit822
    @randomanimeshit822 Před 6 lety +1

    good vid

  • @mushroomkingdom5317
    @mushroomkingdom5317 Před 4 lety

    All the dislikes shows how uncomfortable white people are with their own history 🤷‍♂️

  • @pauljonessoftware
    @pauljonessoftware Před 2 lety

    Sounds like the history of another people I know.

  • @filthyan1mal588
    @filthyan1mal588 Před 2 lety

    That's powerful man.

  • @Hearthian
    @Hearthian Před 3 lety

    Not to get political or anything, but what is a lemon?

    • @grandmasteryoda3594
      @grandmasteryoda3594 Před 2 lety +1

      The lemon (Citrus limon) is a species of small evergreen tree in the flowering plant family Rutaceae, native to South Asia, primarily Northeast India (Assam).
      The tree's ellipsoidal yellow fruit is used for culinary and non-culinary purposes throughout the world, primarily for its juice, which has both culinary and cleaning uses.[2] The pulp and rind are also used in cooking and baking. The juice of the lemon is about 5% to 6% citric acid, with a pH of around 2.2, giving it a sour taste. The distinctive sour taste of lemon juice makes it a key ingredient in drinks and foods such as lemonade and lemon meringue pie.
      The origin of the lemon is unknown, though lemons are thought to have first grown in Assam (a region in northeast India), northern Burma or China.[2][failed verification] A genomic study of the lemon indicated it was a hybrid between bitter orange (sour orange) and citron.[3][4]
      Lemons entered Europe near southern Italy no later than the second century AD, during the time of Ancient Rome.[2] However, they were not widely cultivated. They were later introduced to Persia and then to Iraq and Egypt around 700 AD.[2] The lemon was first recorded in literature in a 10th-century Arabic treatise on farming, and was also used as an ornamental plant in early Islamic gardens.[2] It was distributed widely throughout the Arab world and the Mediterranean region between 1000 and 1150.[2] An article on Lemon and lime tree cultivation in Andalusia of Spain is brought down in Ibn al-'Awwam's 12th-century agricultural work, Book on Agriculture.[5]
      The first substantial cultivation of lemons in Europe began in Genoa in the middle of the 15th century. The lemon was later introduced to the Americas in 1493 when Christopher Columbus brought lemon seeds to Hispaniola on his voyages. Spanish conquest throughout the New World helped spread lemon seeds. It was mainly used as an ornamental plant and for medicine.[2] In the 19th century, lemons were increasingly planted in Florida and California.[2]
      In 1747, James Lind's experiments on seamen suffering from scurvy involved adding lemon juice to their diets, though vitamin C was not yet known as an important dietary ingredient.[2][6]
      The origin of the word lemon may be Middle Eastern.[2] The word draws from the Old French limon, then Italian limone, from the Arabic laymūn or līmūn, and from the Persian līmūn, a generic term for citrus fruit, which is a cognate of Sanskrit (nimbū, “lime”).[7]
      The 'Bonnie Brae' is oblong, smooth, thin-skinned and seedless.[8] These are mostly grown in San Diego County, USA.[9]
      The 'Eureka' grows year-round and abundantly. This is the common supermarket lemon,[10] also known as 'Four Seasons' (Quatre Saisons) because of its ability to produce fruit and flowers together throughout the year. This variety is also available as a plant to domestic customers.[11] There is also a pink-fleshed Eureka lemon, with a green and yellow variegated outer skin.[12]
      The Lisbon lemon is very similar to the Eureka and is the other common supermarket lemon. It is smoother than the Eureka, has thinner skin, and has fewer or no seeds. It generally produces more juice than the Eureka.[13][14]
      The 'Femminello St. Teresa', or 'Sorrento'[15] is native to Italy. This fruit's zest is high in lemon oils. It is the variety traditionally used in the making of limoncello.
      The 'Yen Ben' is an Australasian cultivar.[16]
      Lemon is a rich source of vitamin C, providing 64% of the Daily Value in a 100 g reference amount (table). Other essential nutrients are low in content.
      Lemons contain numerous phytochemicals, including polyphenols, terpenes, and tannins.[17] Lemon juice contains slightly more citric acid than lime juice (about 47 g/l), nearly twice the citric acid of grapefruit juice, and about five times the amount of citric acid found in orange juice.[18]
      Lemon juice, rind, and peel are used in a wide variety of foods and drinks. The whole lemon is used to make marmalade, lemon curd and lemon liqueur. Lemon slices and lemon rind are used as a garnish for food and drinks. Lemon zest, the grated outer rind of the fruit, is used to add flavor to baked goods, puddings, rice, and other dishes.
      Juice
      Lemon juice is used to make lemonade, soft drinks, and cocktails. It is used in marinades for fish, where its acid neutralizes amines in fish by converting them into nonvolatile ammonium salts. In meat, the acid partially hydrolyzes tough collagen fibers, tenderizing it.[19] In the United Kingdom, lemon juice is frequently added to pancakes, especially on Shrove Tuesday.
      Lemon juice is also used as a short-term preservative on certain foods that tend to oxidize and turn brown after being sliced (enzymatic browning), such as apples, bananas, and avocados, where its acid denatures the enzymes.
      Peel
      In Morocco, lemons are preserved in jars or barrels of salt. The salt penetrates the peel and rind, softening them, and curing them so that they last almost indefinitely.[20] The preserved lemon is used in a wide variety of dishes. Preserved lemons can also be found in Sicilian, Italian, Greek, and French dishes.
      The peel can be used in the manufacture of pectin, a polysaccharide used as a gelling agent and stabilizer in food and other products.[21]
      Oil
      Lemon oil is extracted from oil-containing cells in the skin. A machine breaks up the cells, and uses a water spray to flush off the oil. The oil/water mixture is then filtered and separated by centrifugation.[22]
      Leaves
      The leaves of the lemon tree are used to make a tea and for preparing cooked meats and seafoods.
      Other uses include:
      Industrial
      Lemons were the primary commercial source of citric acid before the development of fermentation-based processes.[23]
      Aroma
      Lemon oil may be used in aromatherapy. Lemon oil aroma does not influence the human immune system,[24] but may contribute to relaxation.[25]
      Other
      One educational science experiment involves attaching electrodes to a lemon and using it as a battery to produce electricity. Although very low power, several lemon batteries can power a small digital watch.[26] These experiments also work with other fruits and vegetables.
      Lemon juice may be used as a simple invisible ink, developed by heat.[27]
      Lemon juice can be used to increase the blonde colour of hair, acting as a natural highlight after the moistened hair is exposed to sunlight. This is due to the citric acid that acts as bleach.
      Lemons need a minimum temperature of around 7 °C (45 °F), so they are not hardy year-round in temperate climates, but become hardier as they mature.[30] Citrus require minimal pruning by trimming overcrowded branches, with the tallest branch cut back to encourage bushy growth.[30] Throughout summer, pinching back tips of the most vigorous growth assures more abundant canopy development. As mature plants may produce unwanted, fast-growing shoots (called "water shoots"), these are removed from the main branches at the bottom or middle of the plant.[30]
      The tradition of urinating near a lemon tree[31][32][33] may result from color-based sympathetic magic.
      In cultivation in the UK, the cultivars "Meyer"[34] and "Variegata"[35] have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit (confirmed 2017).[36]
      In 2018, world production of lemons (combined with limes for reporting) was 19.4 million tonnes.[37] The top producers - India, Mexico, China, Argentina, Brazil, and Turkey - collectively accounted for 65% of global production (table).[37]
      Many plants taste or smell similar to lemons.
      Limes, another common sour citrus fruit, used similarly to lemons
      Kaffir lime leaves: common in east Asian cuisine
      Certain cultivars of basil
      Sumac fruits, were used long before lemons were known to Europeans
      Cymbopogon (lemongrass)
      Lemon balm, a mint-like herbaceous perennial in the family Lamiaceae
      Two varieties of scented geranium: Pelargonium crispum (lemon geranium) and Pelargonium x melissinum (lemon balm)
      Lemon thyme[38]
      Lemon verbena
      Certain cultivars of mint
      Magnolia grandiflora tree flowers
      There are other citrus fruits called lemons, like:
      Flat lemon, a mandarin hybrid
      Meyer lemon, a cross between a citron and a mandarin/pomelo hybrid distinct from sour or sweet orange,[39] named after Frank N. Meyer, who first introduced it to the United States in 1908. Thin-skinned and slightly less acidic than the Lisbon and Eureka lemons, Meyer lemons require more care when shipping and are not widely grown on a commercial basis. Meyer lemons often mature to a yellow-orange color. They are slightly more frost-tolerant.
      Ponderosa lemon, more cold-sensitive than true lemons, the fruit are thick-skinned and very large. Genetic analysis showed it to be a complex hybrid of citron and pomelo.[39]
      Rough lemon, a citron-mandarin cross, cold-hardy and often used as a citrus rootstock[39]
      Sweet lemons or sweet limes, a mixed group including the lumia (pear lemon), limetta, and Palestinian sweet lime. Among them is the Jaffa lemon, a pomelo-citron hybrid.[39]
      Volkamer lemon, like the rough lemon, a citron-mandarin cross[39]

    • @thinkingallowed7042
      @thinkingallowed7042 Před rokem

      A badly performing or useless person or vehicle or idea (Australian slang).

  • @ernestoj2223
    @ernestoj2223 Před 8 lety +5

    Australians are much more likable than Canadians or the British. They are everything their cousins are not at times. Realist in comparison one could say.
    1. Australia
    2. UK
    3. Canada

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +4

      The whole point of Stan's talk is to teach us that we need to show respect for ALL cultures EQUALLY and NOT rate some people as BETTER than others.

    • @joshharper7466
      @joshharper7466 Před 4 lety

      Everyone is entitled to their opinion, which includes yourself. I hope you revisit this video to think about the message you’ve written

  • @chingchee3876
    @chingchee3876 Před 11 měsíci

    😮 Stan go and live in a remote indigenous community and help these people . But no, Stan prefers to live in the lap of luxury in DENMARK !

    • @SuperDecdog
      @SuperDecdog Před 2 měsíci

      So an Indigenous man can’t be successful?

    • @chingchee3876
      @chingchee3876 Před 2 měsíci

      @@SuperDecdog . Stan dumped his Abo wife & kids for a beautiful white woman called Tracey Holmes . He is a two faced hypocrite.

    • @chingchee3876
      @chingchee3876 Před 2 měsíci

      @@SuperDecdog . What a stupid thing to say. Hello S.D Dog , Stan the tan dumped his Aboriginal wife and children for a beautiful caucasian woman named Tracey Holmes. Stan should do what he preaches and help his people.

    • @chingchee3876
      @chingchee3876 Před 2 měsíci

      @@SuperDecdog . Stan has never lived amongst the Aborigines of remote Australia whom he refers to as " my people". He is two faced . He prefers the luxury of Denmark.

    • @SuperDecdog
      @SuperDecdog Před 2 měsíci

      @@chingchee3876 imagine using the word aborigines in 2023. You are also zero per cent less Aboriginal if you don't live in remote communities, and there is no rule to say first nations people can't get ahead haha. Such backwards logic

  • @michaelparks7177
    @michaelparks7177 Před 9 měsíci

    I See you Stan. Find me.

  • @rancierae
    @rancierae Před 4 lety +4

    How about personal responsibility. He was booed because he humiliated a 13 year old girl

    • @braydenandracheltucker708
      @braydenandracheltucker708 Před 4 lety +3

      He pointed out a racist remark she made as it should have no place in society. It just so happened to be a 13 year old girl that said it and then the next morning he told the country not to be mad at her

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety +1

      Can you imagine if someone screamed out that a professional sportsperson was an 'ape' at a Tennis Open? Or at a golfing championship? Or at a cocktail party? Or at a picnic in the park? This kind of behaviour is no different to urinating in public, or spitting in someone's face, or defecating on someone's shoes. If you stoop to that level you have to expect there will be consequences - it doesn't matter how old you are. There are some things that society simply does not tolerate.
      Let's not forget that this event happened during the INDIGENOUS round, making matters exponentially worse.
      More importantly, Adam gave her his full support and asked the country to do the same. Adam and Julia spoke on the phone, Julia apologised and explained that she was unaware that it was racial, and afterward her mother said: "She's been going on quite nicely, she's at school, and she hasn't worried about this event at all."
      Every single person in Australia is now clearer about what is acceptable and what is not. And every single Australian is now clearer about what we're responsible for teaching our children.
      Racism. It stops with me.

    • @rancierae
      @rancierae Před 4 lety +2

      Tiff Meek thx for taking the time to comment, but i dont believe your comparison is accurate. Someone abusing me verbally is not the same as someone urinating deliberately on me. A professional sportsman , like Goodes, is not un underprivileged person. He has had help and opportunity given him by our great society. He is using his privilege to divide

    • @tiffmeek
      @tiffmeek Před 4 lety

      @@rancierae Oh I couldn't disagree with you more. He is using his privilege to address an evil that has divided the nation since we began mistreating the original inhabitants of this land. The evil of racism. The sooner Aussie's wake up to the fact that racism toward minorities within a multicultural country is deeply divisive and contrary to the country's best interest the better. And verbally abusing another human being with personal insults designed to devalue or humiliate is probably, truth be told, FAR WORSE than urinating on someone. The socially inept walk through life thinking words don't matter or shouldn't matter. Freedom of speech comes with deep responsibility.

    • @adama-k2710
      @adama-k2710 Před 4 lety +1

      She humiliated herself as she was caught on live television saying that.

  • @cooperlennon3483
    @cooperlennon3483 Před 3 měsíci

    yo whos homies crib was this madness at cuhh?