The quality of Australia’s mainstream media like Fordham set a tone that is bullying and impossible to believe. A tone for us all insisting we are not racist but are against The Voice. We lead the world while all other colonial nations have agreed, either in their Constitutions or by Treaty to listen to the Voice of their First peoples. These curmudgeons proudly stand with Israel, Russia China and the UK, with no Universal Human Rights Bill and even support Dutton’s wannabe LNP government that wishes to rid us of the UN’s AHRC.
Our Mainstream media is not reporting polls but interpreting them in a way to influence the public and set a mood. A mood, that is significantly less generous to what Australians want. There’s little or no attention given to the “undecided” who seem to have been cobbled together with the no voters. An easier option when forced to give a Yes or No answer when surrounded by the mis and disinformation the media has also chosen to publish.
Australia has truly become Americanised politically and with media adopting only one side. It’s certainly not the side of the Government we Australians chose in a landslide for better integrity and improved management of progress to show the world we truly are the land of a “fair go”. The media seem to be a sounding board for a U-turn back to the 50s with their moronic chant “don’t take the risk Albo”
The Indigenous Voice to parliament is headed towards a referendum defeat, with most NSW voters supporting the No campaign for the first time and just 31 per cent of Australians expecting the Yes vote to succeed.
and
Yes, Peter Costello’s The AGE puts Massola’s by-line on the front page “Yes Vote is Unlikely” to win as “News” rather than Opinion setting the mood for the No Campaign
So, yes; some individual First Nations people are against the Voice, and for widely differing reasons, but the vast majority – currently 82 per cent – are for it. Eighty-two per cent. That’s a lot of voices. I hope the rest of us can hear them.
Source: Voice to parliament: Peter Dutton’s divisive language must not derail Australia’s 1967 moment