| Proud to be a child of God, a faithful son (I hope lol) a trying to be hardworking student, a part-time worker, a nerf/milsim enthusiast, a crafting and music lover and an awesome friend. to you :) Hope you have an enjoyable time reading about my life, as much as I have fun living it! | MinimalistI am a university student who loves chocolate! Coffee is my best buddy when it comes to taking on my finals. I have a tendency to want to try and do so many different things at once and as a result, I've found my hobbies to be as such!   Nerfing is one of them, but aside from that, I also love arts and craft. I have my own startup, Thumbforlego at: where I sell my works!   I love to do all sorts of crafting, so you will see me uploading posts of my leathercrafts, thumbdrives, replica guns, nerf gun modifications and gundam models! I'm fortunate enough to be blessed by really supportive parents and given the chance to explore many, many parts of the world and try out a plethora of activities. This is also how I discovered my love for film photography, videography and piano.   The film photo above is unedited! My family loves cold countries xD. We managed to catch the northern lights twice!     I've also gotten the chance to experience many of nature's wonders   And my most freezing experience to date: riding a husky ski sled into the sunset (It was -38 to -40 degrees celsius and the huskies were pretty fast.)   Leave a message after the tone Why 36000feetabove? This is the altitude that commercial planes cruise at and I have always loved the view up in the sky, being amongst the sea of clouds. :) Personally, my favourite favourite food has got to be airplane buns! Does anyone else feel the same way?! With a slice of butter and looking out of the window, I have yet to find an experience that can beat that.   After tomorrow, before today
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 Wednesday, November 17, 2010ARTICLE::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Australia moves to recognize Aborigines in constitution (CNN) -- Australia's government said Monday that it is moving to recognize Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in the nation's constitution. "The Australian Constitution is the foundation document of our system of government, but it fails to recognize the special place of our first Australians," Prime Minister Julia Gillard's office said in a statement. A panel will consider how to advance constitutional recognition and offer options for an amendment that Australians could vote on in a referendum, the office said. The panel -- which is to include indigenous and community leaders, constitutional experts and parliamentary members -- will lead a national discussion during 2011, the administration said. Australia will push further for reforms and investments in early education, health, jobs, housing and services, and infrastructure, aiming to "close the gap in Indigenous disadvantage," the administration said. In 2008, the Australian government apologized for years of "mistreatment" that inflicted "profound grief, suffering and loss" on the country's Aboriginal people. Lawmakers unanimously passed a motion proposing the apology. Then-Prime Minister Kevin Rudd read the apology to Aborigines and the "stolen generations" of children who were taken from their families. "We apologize for the laws and policies of successive parliaments and governments that have inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss on these, our fellow Australians. We apologize especially for the removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families, their communities and their country. "For the pain, suffering and hurt of these stolen generations, their descendants and for their families left behind, we say sorry," Rudd said. "To the mothers and father, the brothers and the sisters, for the breaking up of families and communities, we say sorry. And for the indignity and degradation thus inflicted on a proud people and a proud culture, we say sorry." For 60 years, until 1970, the Australian government took mixed-race Aboriginal children from their families and put them in dormitories or industrial schools, claiming it was protecting them. As a result of the policy, "stolen" children lost contact with their families and heritage, received poor education, lived in harsh conditions and often endured abuse. Rudd said the apology was the start of a new approach toward Aborigines, which included helping them find their lost families, and closing pay gaps and a 17-year difference in life expectancy between Aborigines and white Australians. The child-removal policy was largely a secret until about a decade ago, when a government inquiry exposed it. That sparked a mass movement, supported by many white Australians, demanding an apology. RESPONSE:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Definitely a thumbs up to this move by the constitution as it steps up to make improvements and "close the gap in indigenous advantage". Due to the child removal policy, aborigine kids have been put into home and separated from their families and now that the government is able to publicly apologise to the affected for their wrong move and begin to recognise the aborigines in constitution. After they have apologised, the next move is making up for it, which is the recognising of them in constitution and possibly ways to close the large income gap and life expectancy. However i have no idea how they intend to close the income gap. The "making up for it" portion is the part that will give me a more sound impression of the Australian government. What exactly are they going to do and just how long are they going to take? Just how important will it be towards the government? The damage of the child remove policy goes beyond the 60 years that it has been implemented, and in my opinion, the damage is huge. Family trees are cut off, broken families occur as a result of such a policy. These are some of the many negative effects occured from this wrong move. On the contrary, the government is made up of people, and people do make mistakes. Moreover there is no one policy that works in favour of everyone. If one side stands to gain, the other side loses. (Although i don't really see the "gain" in this policy since the children are subjected to abuse even though the government tries to protect them.) It is heartening to see the government being able to make an attempt to treat the people fairly and in this sense the people consists of Australians as well as aborigines but will the government succeed in doing so, is another story altogether. On the whole, i feel that this is a good start towards the recognition of the aborigines in constitution. Labels: newspaper article reply | 

