Dear John,
One Nation to lead NO
case on voice
Pauline Hanson’s One Nation will spearhead the campaign for the
‘no’ vote in the coming referendum on an indigenous ‘voice to
Parliament’.
One Nation leader Senator Pauline Hanson has led the charge,
strongly arguing the flawed and divisive ‘voice’ proposed by Anthony
Albanese's Labor Government will be a step backwards for the
Constitution that risked forever dividing the Australian people on
race.
“There is nothing in this proposal which addresses real indigenous
disadvantage,” Senator Hanson said.
“There is nothing in this proposal that will end the violence,
poverty and failure of service delivery in Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander communities. There is nothing in this proposal that is
remotely unifying.
“I’m confident all of us want indigenous people to be empowered to
seize the many opportunities which come with living, learning and
working in Australia. I’m equally confident many Australians will
resist giving a minority of people more political power than the
majority based on race.
“That sort of thing was known as apartheid in South Africa, and it
was rightly consigned to the dustbin of history. How can we possibly
be contemplating this in Australia?”
One Nation had already registered 46 website domain names in
preparation for what would be a comprehensive and urgent campaign to
convince Australians to reject racism and separatism by voting ‘no’ to
the proposed ‘voice to Parliament.
“The ‘yes’ campaign is ill-defined and ill-prepared, not even
having the foresight to register the domain names we will use to good
effect,” she said.
“We also have no idea how much this entire exercise will cost the
Australian taxpayer, but a single-question referendum alone will
almost certainly cost in excess of $120 million.
“This also begs the question: will the Albanese government
guarantee equal funding for both campaigns? It’s the only fair
approach, however One Nation will not wait for the Prime Minister’s
excuses and will run a strong campaign against this racist, divisive
proposal that will set back reconciliation and our entire country by
decades.”
Don’t Vote For A Blank
Cheque
By One Nation NSW leader Mark
Latham
Anthony Albanese is unveiling his referendum question to establish
an Indigenous Voice, according to the Uluṟu Statement.
He wants the Australian people to give him and other Federal
politicians a blank cheque: for the parliament in Canberra to be
given power to determine the powers and role of the Indigenous Voice
as it sees fit.
This could mean anything.
Under a Labor Greens Government it could mean:
- winding back private property rights with an extension of Native
Title under a rewriting of the Mabo settlement.
- a full scale Aboriginal Treaty the Australian people never agreed
to.
- the rewriting of Australian history in our schools according to
the Left interpretation of a vicious, genocidal nation.
- automatically moving Australia Day away from 26 January.
- a new Australian flag based on Indigenous design.
- increased Aboriginal welfare entitlements, further diminishing the
pride and self-reliance of a once proud people, further entrenching
their culture in welfare dependency, family violence, substance abuse
and squalor.
- a repeat of the failed ATSIC body from the 1990s, which was
riddled with nepotism, corruption and wasted taxpayers' money.
The Albanese plan for the parliament to sort out all the Indigenous
Voice details is a plan for unlimited power and radical reform.
This is a very dangerous time in our national history.
The Australian people should determine who is in our parliaments,
like the recent election of Senator Jacinta Price, who has already
spoken out powerfully against virtue signalling and in favour of
practical solutions in Aboriginal affairs.
Jacinta opposes the Indigenous Voice and so should we.
"VOTE NO" Stickers
Show your support against creating division in Australia with our
"VOTE NO" stickers, this will help fellow Australians make the
decision when the time comes to vote on a voice to parliament.
Pauline Hanson’s One Nation http://www.onenation.org.au/
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