Mark F wrote:As I understand it, the only reason climbing has been allowed since the hand back to the Anangu people is that the area was leased back to the Commonwealth (give with one hand and take away with the other) and elements on the NT tourism industry kicked up a big stink about climbing being banned.
puredingo wrote:Interesting to note a lot of the No-Climb supporters have already climbed the thing!....
crollsurf wrote: The one thing that is not clear to me is that their "God" is the earth so in that respect, everywhere is sacred. I guess some places are just more sacred than others.
north-north-west wrote:It's not about degree but nature. The tjukurpa associated with Uluru is such that walking on it is a really bad thing. There are places where some people are OK, but not others, places where certain types of activity are OK, but not others, places where access by anyone is against their laws, places where it's pretty much open slather. It's an extremely complex cultural bloc.
Hallu wrote: I don't know how many people thinking like that are left in Australia.
crollsurf wrote:EDIT: "The Greatest Estate on Earth" I can recommend highly. A bit boring in places where the author goes on and on, validating his observations but totally dispels the idea that aborigines where hunter gathers. Might have looked like hunting and gathering to European settlers but was in fact harvesting. They worked and managed the land like any other farmer, just differently and more effectively to what was known in the European world. And this is why our National Parks should manage there Parks the same way. They have not inherited wilderness but cultivated lands.
Nuts wrote:Enough for his work to (help re-affirm the high court's Mabo decision and) further dispel the application of Terra nullius.
Traditional ownership, the pittance so ruled, has been accepted in all fairness and by a system we have a withering excuse not to comprehend.
geoskid wrote:Nuts wrote:Enough for his work to (help re-affirm the high court's Mabo decision and) further dispel the application of Terra nullius.
Traditional ownership, the pittance so ruled, has been accepted in all fairness and by a system we have a withering excuse not to comprehend.
Fair dinkum. We all know now (or can know) that all peoples originated out of Africa and that no one particular individual can claim to have a greater connection to 'Country'. Let alone a person younger than me claiming a greater connection to country than me. SBS, please, mate. WT *$&# is a new age custodian. Really. Follow your thinking through. Think about the idea of ownership. We, and I, say ,I own my block of land that I built my Mudbrick house on. What It actually means is that I own the title to the block of land that I built my house on. When humans migrated out of Africa and eventually found themselves in a landscape that was amenable to flourishing, ownership was not in the thinking. If people want to talk about 'ownership', you can confidently disregard them as not being up to speed if this includes descendants that talk of rights beyond their right to live or die at the whim of the elements. Nobody has rights, unless agreed upon with other human beings.
Lindsay wrote:There is no such thing as an indigenous 'nation' in Australia. Aboriginal society was organised around loose groups of extended family, not a nation in the accepted sense. The first settlers were instructed to acquire land from the natives by trade or agreement, but could not find any individual or any formal structure within aboriginal society with the authority to make such a deal. The 'nations' concept is a construct by professional aborigines to give themselves a legitimacy as self appointed spokespeople for the aboriginal people that otherwise would not exist.
Lindsay wrote: . . . a construct by professional aborigines . . .
Lindsay wrote:There is no such thing as an indigenous 'nation' in Australia. Aboriginal society was organised around loose groups of extended family, not a nation in the accepted sense.
Lindsay wrote:The first settlers were instructed to acquire land from the natives by trade or agreement, but could not find any individual or any formal structure within aboriginal society with the authority to make such a deal.
Lindsay wrote:The 'nations' concept is a construct by professional aborigines to give themselves a legitimacy as self appointed spokespeople for the aboriginal people that otherwise would not exist.
Hallu wrote:There is no debate here. When you migrate to a land devoid of people, inhabit that land, don't abuse its resources, and teach to respect it, for thousands of years, it's yours. Anyway we're just talking about Uluru there. When you visit Monument Valley and realise some bits you can't visit, you don't tell the Navajos "hey are you sure this is your land ? Can we debate this ?". There are places I can't visit in France. Some are rock art caves like Lascaux, others are certain regilious buildings, some are nature reserves. It's fine...
Hallu wrote:There is no debate here. When you migrate to a land devoid of people, inhabit that land, don't abuse its resources, and teach to respect it, for thousands of years, it's yours. Anyway we're just talking about Uluru there. When you visit Monument Valley and realise some bits you can't visit, you don't tell the Navajos "hey are you sure this is your land ? Can we debate this ?". There are places I can't visit in France. Some are rock art caves like Lascaux, others are certain regilious buildings, some are nature reserves. It's fine...
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