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A personal tale that is indicative of the hypocrisy of so many
Multiculturalists.
One
day I walked into my front garden to do a spot of gardening, and was greeted
from over my fence by my neighbours, who were just on their way out as a family:
the husband, the wife and the three children. The lady of the house informed me
that they were on their way to the
She
asked if I was planning to go, I informed her that I was not, as I hadn't done
anything to the Aborigines to apologise for and that I was a recent migrant from
She
explained to me that it was not the point whether I had personally done any
wrong. The fact was that I was white and white people were to blame for all past
injustices.
"Ah",
I said, "you believe in collective guilt and retrospective guilt at that." "Ok",
I said "that's fine, will you be having a march through Bondi demanding that the
local Jewish community say sorry for killing Jesus?" (the idea was ridiculous,
but it certainly fitted in with her illogical notion of collective guilt), at
which point she gave me a look of total contempt, mumbled something inaudible,
and they left for their family guilt trip.
I
must give some background information before we continue. My neighbours were not
bad people, we got on well with them, despite the fact that the lady had been a
card-carrying member of the Communist Party, was now a card-carrying member of
the Labor Party, and she knew my politics.
Now
a year or so had passed and we decided to sell the house and move, I thought I
would tell the neighbours of our plans and at the same time have a bit of an
integrity test.
So I
told them of our plans and then added casually that we wouldn't be advertising
the sale, having signs and advertisements in the paper etc., because we had
found a buyer already.
I
was purposely vague about it being "Some kind of government department or other"
that buys houses for deprived families from the bush with the idea of giving
them a fresh start in the city. I added "I think they're from Dubbo or
somewhere".
Now
I had her full attention, I mean I could have said "Look up in the sky, an
engine just fell off that jumbo jet, it's going down", and she still would have
continued staring at me with her brain racing with horrible scenarios. I smiled
and said "I'm
sure you will get on with the new neighbours because of your tolerance
etc".
She
was so horrified she broke her silence, suddenly speaking faster than usual,
"What people, who are they, I mean, do you mean, are they, um, um, well you
know?"
I
acted dumb and said "Sorry I don't follow". "What government department", she
said, "who are they, what trouble have they been in, I mean are they...?" (she
couldn't even bring herself to say the word).
I
said "Aboriginal? Yes, an Aboriginal family, a mum, dad, a few kids, something
about a fresh start, a new environment, you know how these government department
people speak. I remember now, Aboriginal housing, that's it, that's what they're
called."
Now
she couldn't keep it in any longer, "No no, have you signed anything? What have
you signed? No, no..."
Now
she was running the fingers from both her hands through her hair, looking down
at the ground and breathing heavily through her nose.
I
said, "What's wrong, are you ok? You look quite upset".
She
looks up at me "Have they been in trouble, been to jail, trouble with the
police, what have they done, what do you mean new start, new start from what?
I've got kids here, we've got to live here, I've got
kids..."
"So
have they," I said "and I'm surprised at your negative stereotyping" (I never
said to her that these Aborigines had been in any trouble), now she starts
walking in circles in her front garden, hands on hips, shaking her head,
mumbling something about her daughters bedroom being out the back of the
house.
At
this point I actually felt sorry for her. I mean, I had really put this poor
women through an ordeal; she was in a real state of shock. I decided to come
clean to put her out of her misery.
I
said "I'm only joking, there is no Aboriginal family.
I made it up to see if you were fair dinkum, you know about the bridge walk and
all the believing in multiracialism stuff'.
There
was a visible moment of relief, swiftly followed by anger, "You f***ing bastard
(etc. etc.)", and she ran in the house and slammed the
door.
To
her credit, I saw her the next day, she was polite and said "Good day". The
incident was never mentioned again and relations were
cordial.
The moral to the story is that
even the most vocal card-holding members of pro-multiracial parties know deep
down that their ideology is all lies, it's "Do as I say, not do as I do" with
them, and that when multiracialism comes too close for comfort, they will reject
it.