Have you lived anywhere apart from upper middle class suburbs in the city? It's not good at all but sadly that's just the way it is out in the Goldfields.This is just what we are talking about ,stereotyping![]()
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Have you lived anywhere apart from upper middle class suburbs in the city? It's not good at all but sadly that's just the way it is out in the Goldfields.This is just what we are talking about ,stereotyping![]()
Kalgoorlie is supposedly the most racist city in Aus, I am not sure what framework was used to establish that fact, but you get the picture.Have you lived anywhere apart from upper middle class suburbs in the city? It's not good at all but sadly that's just the way it is out in the Goldfields.
Kalgoorlie is supposedly the most racist city in Aus, I am not sure what framework was used to establish that fact, but you get the picture.
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It's not great. You see a lot of bumper stickers with 'Kalgoorlie - capital of NZ' getting around. Maoris get treated quite poorly tooWouldn't surprise me.. Worked with a girl that had just flown in over from NZ when I was up there and she said she was quite shocked by it.
I grew up in Albany. Not a lot different to Kalgoorlie. Except with a few more nice old buildings and some beautiful beaches, less fluro wearing machos but just as many narrow minded middle class and feral class. I can tell you absolutely how many Aboriginal kids got around. Admittedly I lived in a really nice area near the beach. And undeniably less Aboriginals lived there. Very few. It was all very white and middle class and more likely to attract pretentious arseholes than Aboriginals. Alas, I knew plenty and can see the issues they faced.Have you lived anywhere apart from upper middle class suburbs in the city? It's not good at all but sadly that's just the way it is out in the Goldfields.
Yea it is. Theres alot of narrow minded, naive posters here who shoot first without thinking. I dont know whether its out and out racism or not coz I think society kinda induces a profile that doesnt allow understanding.
Yea I've been none to fly off the handle on the odd occasion or two.
We already did.I doubt we'll be seeing Simpson playing in 2014 for freo.
The bloke missed the flight cos he was upset that he wasn't picked, IMO thats soft. Where does one being racist come into this at all? Ive just judged him how I would judge all other footballers. The thought of race only came into this as an afterthought when I veered into this thread and people excused his showing because he may have not being climatized to the rigours of AFL football. That has very little to do with how he handled the situation, its not like the situation where Ripper alluded to a 'black-fella' missing out on work because of a funeral or because he missed his family, the reason Josh didn't rock up to the flight wasnt because of anything to do with how the family is going back home or him being secluded in an urban environment or him having two kids at a young age- which would in some ways excuse not giving 100% in the training or off field regime- but because he didn't get picked (according to Ross), might I ask if thats a result of his cultural upbringing? or if its an individual trait of him not having the appropriate character for a professional environment.
I fully acknowledge how ones upbringing and culture influence people, but in this case I just don't think that rationale flies.
We already did.
I think we're all getting a little off track here..
I've worked predominantly with Indigenous people over the last 5 fantastic years and can tell you committing with sport is a multifaceted issue.
Our traditional regional clients for the most part live healthy, well-balanced lives in their communities but for the most part struggle with adapting to the rigours of a structured Western lifestyle. Just keep in mind that the demands of AFL are often too much for many non-Indigenous players who end up retiring early for a variety of reasons...
But this isn't a cultural issue my friends; Josh Simpson didn't catch the plane because he was pissed off and wasn't re-selected. It's worse than anything SonSon did two years ago and I think he's finished at this club... unless he's willing to beg for forgiveness, and after that he may be allowed to work his way back to WAFL level - with just one minor indiscretion enough to see him out of elite football permanently.
You've completely contradicted yourself there.
Did I?
This is a no brainer
Young kid with exceptional talent who we invested heavily in for whatever reason reacted very badly to being not selected.............he cops his whack and is mentored (come in Son Son & Rodger) back to where he belongs as a 1st 22 for the next 10 years............
If he doesnt want back , we regretfully accept his decision and we make another pick in the 2014 draft
We all make mistakes as young kids, I seem to remember Stevie J being kicked out of the cats for 3 months
The Aboriginal culture is the oldest existent one in the world. They're probably 60,000 years old. That is insane. We think the Melbourne Football Club and the buildings on South Terrace are old. In those 60,000-odd years, these people have crafted their own culture. One that doesn't revolve around money. I always loved how little they care about 'ownership.' Get something? It's everyone's. I went to school with a fair few Aboriginals, played footy with them, and they'd swap boots every weekend because this notion of 'ownership' is so foreign. They're family and community oriented people who couldn't care less about things like that. Anglo-Australian culture could probably be a lot less senile and neurotic with a bit of that thought process.
So I don't think, in the 150 years we've pillaged their incredibly interesting and unique and innovative culture, they've learnt to adapt. The idea of a rural Aboriginal kid caring about a career, a stock portfolio, owning a pub, buying six houses, going into commentary.... the young man does not live a life like that. He's a rural man so connected to his people that he goes back every week. He clearly wants to play footy for Freo but doesn't care about the things other kids might. That's a cool way to be. He's not doing it for the money or the career; he's doing it for the fun of playing professional football.
The club is letting him do this. Good on them. I think Freo realise this and old Ross even said the government and education system don't do it – the club's letting him live his life as he wants to, to indulge in his culture, and maintain a link to his family. That's what'll keep him happy and if he trains two times a week and puts in, he'll get a game. That's already been shown. The club has no right to enforce their ideology of A Normal Life onto anyone.
The club is just annoyed at him spitting the dummy and that's fair enough.
In all honesty, I can sympathise when some people chuck it in. Sometimes you do deserve something and never get it. Sometimes you reckon you should be getting a "well done," a good mark, or to be playing as a rover when you've been chucked in the back pocket. Sometimes that dummy spitting is appropriate and fine. That's if you work as hard as anyone and deserve to be there. I don't have an issue with that, and if that makes me defeatist then I'm defeatist. But it was the way he did it that annoyed the club. And fair enough.
Any parent who wears ripped tracky-dacks has dropped the upbringing ball.![]()
Yes you did.
If you have the understanding you claim, and I presume you are talking about remote area Aboriginals, then you would surely know that committment and adaptation to rigorous time schedules and a Western application to what we consider normal requirements in a workplace environment, are a completely foreign concept in traditional Aboriginal culture.
This kid isn't from Balga, he was outside chasing bungarra's and roos as a kid with barefeet a sharp stick and .22. School, despite his grandmothers best efforts was an option, not a requirement. A part of his normal upbringing would be to suudenly leave his home, regardless of what Western culture demanded of him, to travel to funerals, cultural activities or just plain old what we call "walkabout".
This is ingrained in him and it is especially difficult to readapt to what is a foreign concept to him.
Got a pair on at the moment and I'm taking the kids fishing,so I'm a goner.Don't venture into Cooby or Hami Hill then. Ripped tracky dacks aplenty.
You'd want to be bloody good with a scalpel to separate culture and identity.Yes, I agree with everything you're saying. In the second part of my comment I mentioned that despite all this it wasn't a cultural issue; he didn't jump on the plane because he was pissed off he didn't get selected.
Maybe there are cultural elements involved in that decision making process? I don't know. But I can tell you now if Majak Daw or any other Culturally Diverse player did the same thing he'd find himself seeking new employment pathways.

You'd want to be bloody good with a scalpel to separate culture and identity.
Hopefully just banished to Peel's training or something.I heard on 720AM radio that Josh didn't attend training this week. If that's true then...
Farewell Josh![]()