Facts about Asylum Seekers

I, Aunty Uta,  did get the following from a reply to:

About

Crossborder Operational Matters

posted February 1, 2014 at 10:21 am by d0tski

I do not know how to contact d0tski to get his permission to reblog. I did find what he wrote an excellent contribution. I wished I was articulate and knowledgeable enough to write something similar myself. d0tski wrote this:

 

“Here’s what I’ve been thinking about lately:

Polling shows that 59% of people polled do NOT believe that most asylum seekers who arrive by boat are genuine refugees. Only 30% believed that most boat arrivals are genuine refugees.
Now, those of us who get our news from someone other than Murdoch know this not to be true. We know that greater than 90% of people who arrive by boat will later (much later), be recognised as ‘genuine refugees’.

Of the 1000 people surveyed, 60% felt that boat-arrivals should be treated more harshly.

59% of those surveyed felt that boat-arrivals should not receive financial government assistance.

All these figures tell us that the majority of Australians have no idea who is on these boats. No concept of the types of persecution they are fleeing. No idea that there is no ‘queue’ for asylum seekers to be processed and re-settled. They don’t realise that (for example), in 2011, only 0.7% of the worlds refugees were resettled. These figures also show us that people do not know, or do not believe, that the conditions on Manus and Nauru are tantamount to torture.

Personally, I refuse to believe that people don’t care. I’m convinced that the problem is that people DON’T KNOW.

This needs to change. Television shows such as those shown on the ABC’s “4 Corners”, and SBS’ “Go Back To Where You Came From” are great. I always watch them. But truly, they are preaching to the choir.
Add to that the fact that it is nigh-on impossible to get decent reportage out of these places. Successive governments have made it increasingly difficult for us to know what is going on. For the Abbott government, it’s pretty much their modus operandi.

How do you get the rest of Australia to listen and learn? I don’t know. If we knew that, we wouldn’t have this problem.

I don’t have any answers here, so if you read this far hoping for a revelation, I apologise 🙂 I just think it’s important to know what the problems are before trying to come up with a solution.

Actually, there’s one other thought I’ve had. Have you heard of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs? If you did psych in highschool, you probably covered it. It’s basically the idea that humans have a hierarchy of needs that looks like a pyramid. The greatest needs are at the bottom, and include physiological needs like breathing, food, water etc. We move up the pyramid through Safety, Belonging, Esteem, and eventually (so the theory goes) we reach Self Actualisation at the top.
Now, it’s my personal theory that governments like to try and keep most of their constituents near the bottom of the pyramid. If we’re all worrying about where our next meal may come from, job security, and mundane things like that, we’re never going to get to a point where our greatest needs are ones like morality, truth and creativity. It is in the governments’ (not just in Oz, but all over) best interest that we live in a permanent state of fear. They want us to always worry that someone is going to come and take what is ‘rightfully ours.’ They appeal to our most basic emotions of fear and greed.

Once again, I don’t know how you change that.”

 

 

Aunty Uta’s Comment to this Post by Dotski:

On the first of March, 2014, that is just a few weeks ago, I published the above under the heading: Apologies to the Author.

Today I came across it once more and read it again with great interest. In my opinion this is a very well written article.  I like it so much that I post it here again. I feel it is very saddening that so many people do not know the true facts about Asylum Seekers. Dotski says he does not know how to change that. Does anybody know?

 

 

9 thoughts on “Facts about Asylum Seekers

  1. This is a copy of what Robert Kennedy once said:

    “… the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage, neither our wisdom nor our learning, neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country, it measures everything in short, except that which makes life worthwhile.”

    “Beautifully said, and how true.” Is what Gerard Oosterman said in a reply to his post from yesterday.

    http://oosterman.wordpress.com/2014/04/07/the-agitated-heart/#comment-9498.

    I think what Robert Kennedy said is still very true today. Didn’t RK say it very well?

  2. If ignorance is the problem, as it seems to be, information and awareness must be essential to finding a solution. Uta, you may feel helpless in this situation, but by reblogging this, and giving the URLs of other related sites, you are helping to shout the truth from the rooftops. I pray that people will listen xx

  3. Catterel is correct, you are doing something important by keeping the conversation alive. I like the author’s use of Maslow to understand how we are kept in a stunted growth pattern by our governments (and media, I would add). This is very much the case in the states, where every single day it seems we have some new “thing” to be scared off, from playground equipment to peoples who don’t talk, look, or worship as we do.

    1. This is very much the case here in Australia, too, Linda. ‘There’s lots to be scared off’, this is the impression people get.
      Maybe the people in power do not like it very much if we try to keep the conversation alive?

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