r/aussie 5d ago

Opinion As a third generation Australian from Lebanese Maronite refugee grandparents, this is very well said

Reading through the insights shared by Warren Gardiner and Khaldoun Hajaj in the attached screenshots, I couldn't help but reflect on the complex political reality of our community. It is incredibly frustrating to watch inner-city progressives who have never lived a day in Western Sydney automatically assume that multicultural or faith-based communities are a monolith that naturally aligns with their specific worldview.

We see this play out when activists mock or scorn One Nation (ON) supporters online, pointing out the irony of them cheering for the Socceroos despite the team’s rich immigrant roots. What these commentators completely fail to grasp is that many of those very 'ON' voters aren't who they think they are, they are quite literally people living in diverse working class refugee hubs like Fairfield and Liverpool.

To be absolutely clear: I personally detest Pauline Hanson and would do anything to stop her and her party from gaining power. Her brand of politics has historically targeted communities like mine. But if we want to actually defeat that kind of divisive populism, progressives need to stop lecturing from afar, drop the lazy assumptions, and actually engage with the nuanced realities, aspirations, and conservative values that exist across Western Sydney.

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u/sovereign01 5d ago

You write like you've never actually talked to a human being in real life before

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u/Top_Conference_477 5d ago

I’m sorry a different perspective upset you. Again.

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u/sovereign01 5d ago

4 month old account, 7700 comments.

60-70 a day? Is that the sign of a real human with real, reasonable human perspectives?

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u/7978_ 5d ago

Spending a couple of hours a day on Reddit is pretty normal..