Foundation Needs Support; Daily Advertiser ( 3.12.10 ).
Clearly there is no end in sight to what is seemingly an entrenched parasitic culture of refugees. Is it not enough that Mr. Newah-Jarfoi has disadvantaged other Australians by way of all the tax payer assistance he and other refugees have received from the Australian people, ahead of other needy and disadvantaged groups, he now wishes to sponge the resources of struggling businesses and the community of Wagga Wagga as well !
In an article in the Daily Advertiser ( 3.12.10 ) Mr. Newah-Jarfoi states he wishes to set up a "foundation" to provide education for children in Sierra Leone. There is no doubt this is a worthy cause and has merit, BUT, as Mr. Newah-Jarfoi stated "According to the United Nations, 5 % of Sierra Leone people are illiterate. This lack of education is having a terrible and prolonged effect on the country".
I would refer Mr. Newah-Jarfoi to official Australian government NAPLAN statistics that remote areas and areas of disadvantage in Australia have much worse statistics than 5 % illiteracy, it is more like 60 %. Is Mr. Newah-Jarfoi concerned with these disadvantaged people ?
We would suggest to the people of the Riverina rather than donate yet again to international causes and agencies, they would consider donating to local and or Australian disadvantaged peoples. In the case of literacy and education, they may consider donating to the Australian Literacy and Numeracy Foundation, who are trying to raise $150,000 to support a one year community program as part of the foundations campaign to reverse the situation, where four out of five children in remote Aboriginal communities are unable to read.
Donations can be made to http://www.wallofhands.com.au/. The Herald is a media partner of the Australian Literacy and Numeracy Foundation.
Further worthy causes within Australia, that are desperate for funding and donations are child protection organisations, mental health agencies, assistance for the over 100,000 Australian homeless and rising, including homeless youth and the elderly and many many more worthy and ignored Australian causes in dire need.
We would suggest to Mr. Newah-Jarfoi, that he approach one of these other "charities" such as Red Cross, World Vision and so on, that would happily assist his cause, before that of local need as we note with the Red Cross in Lockhart and the Lockhart flood victims.
Further, as Mr. Newah-Jarfoi would be well aware, the U.N and other "international" groups are providing humanitarian and other assistance to "his country". If he is as passionate about his cause ( as he states in Daily Advertiser ), maybe he should consider returning to Sierra Leone himself to assist the need he speaks of at the coal face ?
This situation is an example of the failure of multiculti and that in reality we are opposing groups joined only by a global economy, rather than any hallucination of a homogeneous nation.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.