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For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
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So, what does a right way to accomodate indigenous groups look like? Has any country accomplished it?
What rights or opportunities are these groups lacking?
A good way to start would be making sure they have adequate political representation. Shutting them out of the politically. When you don't get a groups voice in when making decisions that can lead to consequences. Big issues that aboriginals face in extremely high unemployment, decaying infrastructure and high incarceration rates.
Do they not get a vote? And all i hear is the negative statistics, never what people think should be done to address them. Are employers discriminating?
Does any of it stem from them wanting to live more primitively? Are they turning down education opportunities, or are they not available to them?
Giving a relatively tiny disparate population "a vote" doesn't actually address any of their needs.
Yes.
No.
High quality education is not readily available to them, nor is the infrastructure they need to thrive and the government has invested little to nothing into their infrastructure in comparison to what they invested in abusing them over decades, what they've invested in white cities and towns, and what the value of the land and resources that were stolen from the indigenous people actually are.
Them wanting to live on their ancestral lands to which they have a deep cultural and spiritual connection isn't "wanting to live more primitively". Because Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples often live in remote communities they do not have anything like the educational or employment opportunities that most of the country get.