How can the aboriginal people trust any co-operative agenda with this globalist-minded, covid-vaccine-addicted Government, even now as more light shines on Australia’s recent unconstitutional, fraudulent election process?
The Qld Parks talk of planning for “sustainable livelihoods and economic development opportunities” sounds somewhat incongruous in terms.
Do the aboriginal people trust the promises made about the land to them, such as:
– become independent highly functioning land managers
– meet governance and land management obligations
– create networks and pursue economic development opportunities.
https://parks.des.qld.gov.au/management/programs/joint-management-cape-york

With the present Government it seems safe to say that all Australians will miss out. The local cattle producers and the aboriginal people.

Kevin Annett in Canada continues after many long years of seeing genocide of native peoples to disclose west coast puppet Indian chiefs as China’s biggest allies in the robbing of Canadian resources and sovereignty.
http://murderbydecree.com/2022/05/09/breaking-news-may-9-global-alliance-forms-to-oust-corporatocracy-restore-liberty-a-special-global-communique-from-the-republic-alliance-an-international-federation-of-free-sovereign-nations/#page-content

It was reported prior to the election that Australia’s Indigenous leaders were calling on the next Australian government to hold a referendum on a First Nations Voice to Parliament within two years. Labor has agreed to a referendum on a Voice to Parliament, and has also said it would establish a “Makarrata Commission” to oversee a national process for treaty and truth-telling. Labor MP Linda Burney has said, “An Albanese Labor [government] will work with First Nations communities towards a referendum in our first term”.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-04-11/aboriginal-leaders-call-for-referendum-on-voice-to-parliament/100982290

Back in 2013, the UNGA (United Nations General Assembly) High-level Political Forum (HLPF) on Sustainable Development stated: “The HLPF is well positioned to better integrate sustainable development into global economic governance and policies in order to improve the legitimacy and sustainability of the international economic order.”
http://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/2331Bernstein%20study%20on%20HLPF.pdf

Shortly afterwards, a Traditional Knowledge, Natural Resources meeting was organised by the United Nations University – Institute for the Advanced Study of Sustainability (UNU-IAS), on Respecting Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge and Culture at the IUCN World Parks Congress, which was held from 12 to 19 November 2014 in Sydney, Australia. Sponsors were Australian Government Parks Australia, NSW Government, National Parks and Wildlife Service, NSW.

Patrick Dodson labor senator

Indigenous leaders from around the world, including Patrick Dodson (Australia), Victoria Tauli-Corpuz (the Philippines), Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim (Chad), Ramiro Batzin (Guatemala), and Aroha Mead (New Zealand) attended.

The UNU-IAS and International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Commission on Protected Areas, ran the event called Nature-Culture Linkages: Stewardship of Biocultural Landscapes for Biodiversity and People. Here is their spiel in 2014 –
“The effective and equitable governance of protected areas is considered to be one of the best ways of slowing today’s unprecedented loss of biodiversity. However, while their stewards may be equipped with legal instruments, resource constraints and other issues can make it difficult for protected areas to realize their intended effects. To achieve conservation targets, it is therefore important to recognize the need for cooperative management of buffer zones and corridors that border and surround protected areas. Increasingly, indigenous and traditional knowledge and land-use practices by communities in biocultural landscapes inside and neighbouring protected areas are being recognized for their potential contributions in this area. This session aims to stimulate discussion and solicit suggestions regarding the significance of biocultural landscapes, UNESCO’s Man and the Biosphere Programme, and other protected landscapes, customary uses of biodiversity, and the concept of socio-ecological production landscapes and seascapes (SEPLS) as defined by the Satoyama Initiative.”
https://ias.unu.edu/en/events/archive/side-event/respecting-indigenous-and-traditional-knowledge-and-culture.html#overview

So now in 2022 we are reaping the fruits of their unintelligent hypothesis.

Another session was held on Traditional Fire Management and Climate Change Mitigation, which linked “fire as a key tool in protecting economic, cultural and environmental assets.”

These people are totally bewitched by the serpent. The aboriginal people are being used for totally nefarious purposes and I’m very sorry to see this.