One of my biggest concerns with the Uluru Statement from the Heart is that Truth Telling does not come first.
We need to recognise our colonial roots and work towards dismantling them.
We need to recognise just how much Australian magnate Lang Hancock benefited when he laid claim to lands that Aboriginal people had occupied for thousands of years.
We need to recognise just how wrong he was when he said, “Mining in Australia occupies less than one-fifth of one per cent of the total surface of our continent and yet it supports 14 million people. Nothing should be sacred from mining whether it’s your ground, my ground, the Blackfella's ground or anybody else’s. So the question of Aboriginal land rights and things of this nature shouldn’t exist.”
And when he said in his infamous 1984 interview, “[Aboriginal people] that have been assimilated into, you know, earning good living or earning wages amongst the civilised areas, those that have been accepted into society and they have accepted society and can handle society, I’d leave them well alone.
“The ones that are no good to themselves and can’t accept things, the half-castes - and this is where most of the trouble comes - I would dope the water up so that they were sterile and would breed themselves out in future and that would solve the problem.”
We need to recognise that Hancock’s daughter Gina Rinehart has never publicly condemned the racist words of her father. You can do that when generational wealth makes you Australia’s richest person. When you have a net worth of $31 billion, you can do pretty much anything you want.