on 15-02-2015 04:07 PM
on 15-02-2015 06:22 PM
on 15-02-2015 06:25 PM
on 15-02-2015 06:59 PM
or it could be his way of getting Jacqui Lambie and her supporters onside.
on 15-02-2015 07:13 PM
It's good to be actively vigilant against possible terrorists attacks as long as there's a clear distinction between what defines the guilty and the innocent, that what is the act of individuals is not confused as the act of a whole people. I certainly don;t want Australia to go down the same shameful road as America did with their forced Japanese internment camps regardless of innocence.
on 15-02-2015 07:23 PM
para, it happened in Australia during WW1 and WW2.
http://naa.gov.au/collection/snapshots/internment-camps/index.aspx
on 15-02-2015 07:36 PM
@pct001wine wrote:para, it happened in Australia during WW1 and WW2.
http://naa.gov.au/collection/snapshots/internment-camps/index.aspx
There you go, thanks pct now I hope we don't revert to our own sordid past again
on 15-02-2015 07:41 PM
on 15-02-2015 07:53 PM
@para-slights wrote:It's good to be actively vigilant against possible terrorists attacks as long as there's a clear distinction between what defines the guilty and the innocent, that what is the act of individuals is not confused as the act of a whole people. I certainly don;t want Australia to go down the same shameful road as America did with their forced Japanese internment camps regardless of innocence.
At the time America had internment camps for Japanese, didn't Australia also have internment camps for Germans and Japanese?
During the First and Second World Wars, nationals of countries at war with Australia who were living in Australia were classed as “enemy aliens”. Included as enemy aliens were naturalised British subjects who were born in enemy countries, Australian-born descendants of migrants born in enemy countries and others who were thought to pose a threat to Australia's security.
Australia interned almost 7,000 people during the First World War. About 4,500 were enemy aliens and British nationals of German ancestry already resident in Australia.
During the Second World War, Japanese residents were interned en masse. Germans and Italians were also interned on the basis of their nationality. Australia interned about 7,000 residents, including more than 1,500 British nationals. A further 8,000 people were sent to Australia to be interned after being detained overseas by Australia's allies. In 1942, more than 12,000 people were interned in Australia.
on 15-02-2015 08:05 PM
They must have done. Remember in the show the Sullivans the german shop keeper and his wife were interned. Yes I know it's not real but it was all based on reality.
15-02-2015 08:10 PM - edited 15-02-2015 08:11 PM
Or should that be interred? Mental blank.