What a pathetic response. You accuse no voters of being racist,...

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    What a pathetic response. You accuse no voters of being racist, and them emark on character assassination of indigenous people who have done more for the well being of indigenous people than keyboard warriors like you. l suggest you find out a bit more about them, your probably dismissed them because of your underlying racism.

    So let us be clear, you are calling Jacinta Price and Warren Mundine racist?

    Your as bad as your mate Scott. Here is an extract of the article from the Australian on the 23rd March.

    Don't you agree that Albo is a hypocrite and rude for not having the good manners to meet with them and is in fact being racist by not listening to their voice?


    Warren Mundine mocks Anthony Albanese’s ‘crocodile tears’ on Indigenous voice

    Indigenous leader Warren Mundine. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage

    By PAUL GARVEY

    SENIOR REPORTER

     @PDGarvey

    8:05PM MARCH 23, 2023

    349 COMMENTS

    No campaign leader Warren Mundine has accused Anthony Albanese of “crocodile tears” over the voice after the Prime Minister refused to meet an Indigenous delegation on the eve of Thursday’s announcement.

    Mr Mundine, one of the most prominent Indigenous voices opposed to the constitutional reform, told The Australian on Thursday that Mr Albanese had the opportunity to meet 20 Aboriginal ­people from around the country on Wednesday and had knocked them back. The delegation had travelled to Canberra to express their concerns about the voice, but could secure meetings only with the Coalition and some members of the crossbench.

    Mr Albanese choked back tears on Thursday as he announced the wording of the question to be put to Australians at a referendum later this year.

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    Mr Mundine said his emotion sat in contrast to his unwillingness to meet Wednesday’s delegation.

    “If he‘s fair dinkum and those tears aren’t crocodile tears, he should have met with them and listened to their concerns,” Mr Mundine said. “They are the sort of people he says the voice should be working for. He had the chance to prove that, and he didn’t.”

    While Mr Mundine acknowledged there was still room for improvement in the lives of Indige­nous Australians, he said there had been significant gains in recent decades without a voice. Discriminatory laws had been abolished, the number of Aboriginal businesses had climbed, and there were growing numbers of Indigenous doctors, lawyers and professors, he said.
 
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