Authorities Reinstate Alcohol Ban for Aboriginal Australians


Geoff Shaw cracked open a beer, savoring the simple freedom of having a drink on his porch on a sweltering Saturday morning in mid-February in Australia’s remote Northern Territory.

“For 15 years, I couldn’t buy a beer,” said Mr. Shaw, a 77-year-old Aboriginal elder in Alice Springs, the territory’s third-largest town. “I’m a Vietnam veteran, and I couldn’t even buy a beer.”

Mr. Shaw lives in what the government has deemed a “prescribed area,” an Aboriginal town camp where from 2007 until last year it was illegal to possess alcohol, part of a set of extraordinary race-based interventions into the lives of Indigenous Australians.
Last July, the Northern Territory let the alcohol ban expire for hundreds of Aboriginal communities, calling it racist. But little had been done in the intervening years to address the communities’ severe underlying disadvantage. Once alcohol flowed again, there was an explosion of crime in Alice Springs widely attributed to Aboriginal people. Local and federal politicians reinstated the ban late last month. And Mr. Shaw’s taste of freedom ended.

From the halls of power in the nation’s capital to ramshackle outback settlements, the turmoil in the Northern Territory has revived hard questions that are even older than Australia itself, about race and control and the open wounds of discrimination.

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A man and woman sitting on a shaded porch look down at a small dog the man is holding.

“For 15 years, I couldn’t buy a beer,” said Geoff Shaw, shown with his partner, Eileen Hoosan, at their home in Alice Springs.Credit...Tamati Smith for The New York Times


For those who believe that the country’s largely white leadership should not dictate the decisions of Aboriginal people, the alcohol ban’s return replicates the effects of colonialism and disempowers communities. Others argue that the benefits, like reducing domestic violence and other harms to the most vulnerable, can outweigh the discriminatory effects.

For Mr. Shaw, the restrictions are simply a distraction — another Band-Aid for communities that, to address problems at their roots, need funding and support and to be listened to.

“They had nothing to offer us,” he said. “And they had 15 years to sort this out.”

The liquor restrictions prohibit anyone who lives in Aboriginal town camps on the outskirts of Alice Springs, as well as those in more remote Indigenous communities, from buying takeaway alcohol. The town itself is not included in the ban, though Aboriginal people there often face more scrutiny in trying to buy liquor.

One recent day at Uncle’s Tavern, in the center of Alice Springs, patrons — almost all of them non-Indigenous — drank beneath palm trees strung with lights. In the town of 25,000, it seemed as if everyone had a friend, relative or neighbor who had been the victim of an assault, a break-in or property destruction.

As night fell, Aboriginal people who walked the otherwise empty streets were separated from the pub’s patrons by a fence with tall black bars, like something out of a prison. Sometimes, those outside pressed up against the bars; children asked for money for food, and adults for cigarettes or alcohol. The pub’s gate was open, but there were unspoken barriers to entry for the people outside.

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White Australians have not faced the same alcohol restrictions as Aboriginal people.Credit...Tamati Smith for The New York Times

Two women in the back of a pickup truck on a beach watch a third woman emerge from the water, as a man with a baseball cap opens the vehicle door.

Many Aboriginal people travel into town for basic services from the remote communities where they live, in conditions more akin to those of a developing country. Some Indigenous leaders in and around Alice Springs attribute the spike in crime to these visitors.
In the daytime, they were often the only people sitting in public spaces, with nowhere to go to escape the blistering heat. One Aboriginal visitor to Alice Springs, Gloria Cooper, said she had traveled hundreds of miles for medical treatment and was camping in a nearby dry creek bed because she couldn’t afford a place to stay on her welfare income.

“Lots of people in the creek,” she said. “Lots of children.”

The roots of the 15-year alcohol ban were a national media firestorm that erupted in 2006 over a handful of graphic and highly publicized allegations of child sexual abuse in the Northern Territory.

Many of the allegations were later found to be baseless. But just months before a federal election, the conservative prime minister at the time used them to justify a draconian set of race-based measures. Among them were the alcohol restrictions, along with mandatory income management for welfare recipients and restrictions on Indigenous people’s rights to manage land that they owned.

Now, the debate has flared up again at another politically charged moment, as Australia begins to discuss constitutionally enshrining a “voice to Parliament” — an Indigenous body that would advise on policies that affect Aboriginal communities.

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Two men sit on the porch of a structure in a sandy field.

An Aboriginal town camp in Alice Springs. Little has been done to address Indigenous communities’ severe underlying inequality.Credit...Tamati Smith for The New York Times


Opponents have used the Alice Springs debate to argue that the proposal distracts from practical issues facing Indigenous communities. Supporters say that such a body would have allowed more consultation with affected residents and prevented the problem from escalating.

Indigenous leaders say that the roots of the dysfunction in their communities run deep. A lack of job opportunities has left poverty entrenched, which in turn has exacerbated family violence. Soaring Indigenous incarceration rates have left parents locked away and children adrift. Government controls on Aboriginal people’s lives, imposed without consultation, have bred resentment and hopelessness. Add alcohol to the mix, and the problems only mount.

“We’ve never had our own choice and decision making, our lives have been controlled by others,” said Cherisse Buzzacott, who works to improve Indigenous families’ health literacy. Because of this, she added, those in the most disadvantaged communities “don’t have belief changes can change; they don’t have hope.”

Some Indigenous leaders oppose the alcohol ban on these grounds, arguing that it continues the history of control of Aboriginal communities. Others say that their own contributions to the community show why blanket bans are unfair.

“Some of my mob, some are workers and some are just sitting down, haven’t got a job,” said Benedict Stevens, the president of the Hidden Valley town camp, using a colloquial term for an Aboriginal group. “And what I’m saying is it wouldn’t be fair for us workers to not be able to go back home during the weekends, relax, have some beers.”

Before the alcohol ban expired last year, a coalition of Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal organizations predicted that a sudden free flow of alcohol would produce a sharp rise in crime. They called for the restrictions to be extended so affected communities could have time to develop individualized transition plans.

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A sign listing rules for entering an Aboriginal town camp looms over a gated entrance. An expanse of trees and grass extends beyond the sign.

A sign stating that alcohol is prohibited in a town camp.Credit...Tamati Smith for The New York Times


The predictions proved accurate. According to the Northern Territory police, commercial breaks-ins, property damage, assaults related to domestic violence and alcohol-related assaults all rose by about or by more than 50 percent from 2021 to 2022. Australia does not break down crime data by race, but politicians and Aboriginal groups themselves have attributed the increase largely to Indigenous people.

“This was a preventable situation,” said Donna Ah Chee, the chief executive of one of these organizations, the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress. “It was Aboriginal women, families and children that were actually paying the price,” she added.

The organization was among those that called for a resumption of the ban as an immediate step while long-term solutions were developed to address the underlying drivers of destructive drinking. Ms. Ah Chee said she considered the policy to be “positive discrimination” in protecting those most vulnerable.

What Indigenous leaders on all sides of the debate agreed on was that long-term strategies were needed to address the complex disadvantages facing Indigenous communities.

The problems in Alice Springs were caused by decades of failing to listen to Indigenous people, said William Tilmouth, an Aboriginal elder. The answers, he added, would be found when “politicians and the public looked beyond the alcohol. What they will find is people with voice, strength and solutions waiting to be heard.”
 
So, people who until very recently practiced slavery and cannibalism, and are on average at least one standard deviation lower in IQ than a White person?
I’d take Samoans, Tongans, and Hawaiians over white liberals every day of the week.
Give someone a 50,000 year head start on the most resource rich continent on Earth, and they still manage to racistly blame the latecomers who showed up just two centuries before.
The Maori on the other hand were in New Zealand for at most 600 years, and still built a decent society.
Didn’t the Māori genocide the Abbos in New Zealand?
 
This is a thing in Alaska and possibly also Canada. There's the concept of "dry villages" where any alcohol is banned from being imported, manufactured or sold. This usually happens because Eskimos (whatever you want to call them) are notoriously ill-equipped to handle alcohol and are genetically predisposed to becoming raging alcoholics. These are typically villages with no roads connecting them to other areas, and everything needs to be flown in by plane, making control of what's being brought it easier.

There are stories of people drinking (old school) Listerine and other tangentially alcohol-containing liquids like cologne, etc in order to get their fix in these dry villages, and smuggled booze or homebrew bathtub hooch sells for insane amounts of money there.

All this to say: maybe a blanket ban on booze might do a community good if that community has shown itself to be completely incapable of handling booze.
In certain areas of Alaska, you are limited to the amount of booze you can bring with you on bush flights. There is a lucrative black market and rum running business in the northern parts of Alaska, but the Native Councils/Elders are serious about keeping dry areas dry. Anchorage has a large homeless population, and a lot of it comes from alcoholic and druggie natives exiled from their villages. This is a tradition that is key to the survival of small tribes and villages, because if you have a person that is a perennial troublemaker and does not offer anything towards the survival of the village, you have to get rid of them. In the old days, exile was more or less a death sentence out in the wilds. These days it means being homeless in one of the big cities, contributing to the homeless population, alcoholism, drug use, rape, murder, petty crime rates. Alaska also has a large domestic violence problem, which is largely tied to both natives and alcohol use. But the natives largely like to pretend that they are the noble peoples of the north, with no problems. The DV and rape rates get blamed on the white man.
 
Do you give zoo animals alcohol?
I would give a monkey a couple of beer, why not?

Yeah, those sweet sweet Saturday morning beers.
Whats wrong with that? Im more of a White wine guy myself, but there is nothing wrong with starting your saturday with a Brezn and a Hefeweizen.


I’d just ban booze sales in Alice springs entirely. If you’re together enough to make a drive to the next place that sells it fine, otherwise no place to buy it and it’s one hell of a walk to the next bottle shop. Or just sell that 0.3% shot that’s impossible to get
Thats incredible unfair, beer isnt the problem... just ban abbos from entering the town.
 
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There is a lucrative black market and rum running business in the northern parts of Alaska, but the Native Councils/Elders are serious about keeping dry areas dry.
Ah I see someone who is familiar with the 907 state as well. Believe me brother I know exactly what you mean. I had to witness the flood of villagers coming in during PFD check season and see them passed out in a snow bank outside the local watering hole. Some percentage of them ended up dying but they just come back every year.
 
Are abbos physically incapable of metabolizing alcohol, like American Indians? Or are they just plain old morons?
It's about 50/50. They're not as bad as American Indians, Eskimos, ect. I've seen what alcohol does to those poor bastards.

But they are way, waaaay less intelligent, so getting them even a little drunk makes them go batshit.
 
Yeah, those sweet sweet Saturday morning beers.

You're an alcoholic, mate.
Lol, I was just thinking that. My man has woken up, and the first thing he's done is - instead of, working, or cleaning, or probably even bathing - crack open a can of cheap booze, and get settled in for a day of doing fuck all; whilst also living in what looks to be a set from Thunderdome.
 
Whats wrong with that? Im more of a White wine guy myself, but there is nothing wrong with starting your saturday with a Brezn and a Hefeweizen.
Maybe for a kraut, but I'm Bri'ish and therefore flirting with low level alcoholism at all times. I know what I'm talking about.

Drinking before lunch is like wearing sweatpants in public - it's basically an announcement to the world that you've given up.
 
Lol, I was just thinking that. My man has woken up, and the first thing he's done is - instead of, working, or cleaning, or probably even bathing - crack open a can of cheap booze, and get settled in for a day of doing fuck all; whilst also living in what looks to be a set from Thunderdome.

Well he's 77. He's probably not doing much anymore. I'd say let the old man have his beer. But the kids in the second pic and that post apocalyptic scene from the third makes me think that a ban is for the best. I can see a house with no walls. I can't imagine living like that.
 
What's in the air in Australia to where every animal that goes there loses IQ points?

It's weird to think about. With how much everything there wants you dead you'd expect IQ to go up but it doesn't, I guess it probably has to do with everything there being poisonous or venomous. +resistance to poisons give -IQ points.
You have a subspecies of humans and a group of people descended from prisoners and prison guards.

What do you expect would happen?
 
Give them their welfare.
Give them their beer.
(Edit) spray can paint

Let them die
Good attitude but I think I can propose a better plan:
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Encircle Ayer's rock with a militarized border at a 250 mile radius. Everything inside is theirs. I'm not sure how non-Abbo residents of Alice Springs would feel about evacuating to Coober Pedy but I imagine "no more abbos, ever" would be a strong selling point. A87 becomes a Mad Max type highway tourists can pay to go down. Who would brave the desolate wasteland and potentially violent abbos for tourism? Well I have it on good authority whites in Seth Effrika are very competent at this and looking for reasons to get out.
 
Good attitude but I think I can propose a better plan:
View attachment 4794062
Encircle Ayer's rock with a militarized border at a 250 mile radius. Everything inside is theirs. I'm not sure how non-Abbo residents of Alice Springs would feel about evacuating to Coober Pedy but I imagine "no more abbos, ever" would be a strong selling point. A87 becomes a Mad Max type highway tourists can pay to go down. Who would brave the desolate wasteland and potentially violent abbos for tourism? Well I have it on good authority whites in Seth Effrika are very competent at this and looking for reasons to get out.
You don’t have to build anything around it. Just give them their alcohol and welfare and let them have whatever city you wish to sacrifice. They are shit drivers and will never travel that far without crashing anyways. Your border is simply…the distance it requires to fall asleep at the wheel.

50 mile radius is plenty. Have at it. Everything in this 50 mile radius is yours. Hasta la vi.
 
I’m trying to find some info on it but all I’m getting is muh oppressed communities type stuff.
I’d just ban booze sales in Alice springs entirely. If you’re together enough to make a drive to the next place that sells it fine, otherwise no place to buy it and it’s one hell of a walk to the next bottle shop.
Alot of the victimhood crying comes from peoples not associated in anyway with impoverished communities. They read about at risk populations, shed a fake tear and tweet about it. Much sound and fury. Until they have taken part in or be associated these areas, victim enthusiasts will never get the whole on the ground picture.

Make Alice Springs a dry county, or what ever it is called there. Nobody needs alcohol. If someone wants their vice that much, then make them plan and work for it. I've lived in a few dry areas, you plan ahead or go without. One of these places was Neshoba MS. Home of the MS Band of Choctaw and the local casino. Dry county, wet city, because of the casino. Out of control alcoholism. Was told a story about a Choctaw that a buddy knew. My friend asked his native buddy why he drank. His friend replied thats what he was supposed too do as a Choctaw, just like the rest of people. Circling back to the subject, swap out Alice Springs for the Neshoba Rez and its the same story. Government wont fix the problem, but then neither will the alcoholic.
 
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