They lie about being a "YIMBY" anyway. Go try to put a church they find racist, or a straight men bar, something that would piss off your savage natives (I can't remember what they call them in Oz), or a right wing campaign center. I bet they very quickly become NIMBYs for that.
Besides, not gatekeeping your own neighborhood is stupidity.
Yeah I'm not giving them First Nations or any of that nonsense. Hence "savage natives".
Here for the US, I just use Indians, and the only people I've ever heard offended are white people. I was at a museum in New Mexico a few years ago and there's an guy that works there doing a short tour and kept calling himself and the people Indians. Someone asked him a question and said "Native American" and before he even answered their question he told them Indian was fine. Most of them in Oklahoma use the term Indian. So why do I need to go to "First Nations", "Native American", "Indigenous Tribes", etc. when the actual people ask me to say Indian?
See also: the “Indigenous Voice to Parliament”. Supported by white people who live in cities and claim Indigenous ancestry. Largely opposed by most full-blood non-bureaucrats actually living out there, in remote areas, on-ground…
Funny that. Just makes it all the more obvious who is actually calling the shots, there (it ain’t the full-bloods).
But if you point this out, “You’re rayciss!”, naturally…
They lie about being a "YIMBY" anyway. Go try to put a church they find racist, or a straight men bar, something that would piss off your savage natives (I can't remember what they call them in Oz), or a right wing campaign center. I bet they very quickly become NIMBYs for that.
Besides, not gatekeeping your own neighborhood is stupidity.
Abos. Or Abbos. Take your pick on the spelling, lol.
Never “First Nations”, though, lol…
Don’t give our new elites that one!
Yeah I'm not giving them First Nations or any of that nonsense. Hence "savage natives".
Here for the US, I just use Indians, and the only people I've ever heard offended are white people. I was at a museum in New Mexico a few years ago and there's an guy that works there doing a short tour and kept calling himself and the people Indians. Someone asked him a question and said "Native American" and before he even answered their question he told them Indian was fine. Most of them in Oklahoma use the term Indian. So why do I need to go to "First Nations", "Native American", "Indigenous Tribes", etc. when the actual people ask me to say Indian?
This is always the way…
See also: the “Indigenous Voice to Parliament”. Supported by white people who live in cities and claim Indigenous ancestry. Largely opposed by most full-blood non-bureaucrats actually living out there, in remote areas, on-ground…
Funny that. Just makes it all the more obvious who is actually calling the shots, there (it ain’t the full-bloods).
But if you point this out, “You’re rayciss!”, naturally…