
Being Welcomed to Your Own Country Not Controversial, Says PM
The 48th Parliament of Australia opened with a Welcome to Country, which the Prime Minister claimed is above debate. But do Australians really want to be welcomed to their own country?
It was cold in Canberra Tuesday morning, 10 degrees and chilly. Inside the Great Hall of Parliament House, an Aboriginal woman, Ms Violet Sheridan, stood before the nation’s elected representatives and delivered a Welcome to Country. As she spoke of ancestral spirits and sacred obligations, the stage was set.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese took to the microphone and declared, with smug certainty, that Welcome to Country “is not controversial. Nor should it be.”
That’s when the mask slipped.
The mask slipped because outside, after that black armband theatre, politicians would march through a smoking ceremony on the forecourt of the parliament, ritually purified like actors in a performance none of them dared question. The symbolism was thick. The message? You are a guest here.
Undermining the Legitimacy of the Nation-State
Let’s be blunt: Welcome to Country is controversial. Deeply. It divides Australians by ancestry, not allegiance. And Albanese knows it. He just doesn’t care.
He called it a “a hand warmly and graciously extended,” a symbol of unity. But how is it unifying to be told, day in and day out, that you need permission to enter your own country? How is it respectful to redefine Australians as tenants on ancestral land they supposedly never had a right to?
This isn’t some harmless courtesy. It’s a rhetorical landmine, paving the way for treaty, reparations, land vetoes, and perpetual grievance.
“Always was, always will be.”
That’s how the slogan goes. That the land upon which the nation of Australia was built has forever been and forever will be under Aboriginal ownership.
But that’s not history. Rather, it’s a political claim of ongoing Indigenous sovereignty, directly contradicting High Court precedent and undermining the very legitimacy of the Australian nation-state. The Crown’s sovereignty is the foundation of our law. And yet we now begin our parliamentary business by implying it never existed.
And Albanese calls this uncontroversial?
Australians Have Had Enough
Aboriginal woman and Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price put it best: “Everyone’s getting sick of Welcome to Country.” It tells ordinary Australians they’re outsiders in the country they built, defended, and passed down through generations. The public agrees. Polling shows a clear majority now see these rituals as divisive.
A major poll of over 1,000 Australians conducted for the Institute of Public Affairs just last month confirms the shift: 56% of Australians now see Welcome to Country as divisive, while just 17% disagree. Fewer than one in three support the practice at events like ANZAC Day or sporting matches, and even among young Australians who normally support progressive fads, opinion is split.
Yet, despite the majority view, these rituals are conducted everywhere: before sports games, school assemblies, corporate webinars, and even weather forecasts. What used to be occasional is now obligatory. And like all forced rituals, its meaning has rotted into performance.
Let’s not pretend it’s “ancient” either. The modern Welcome to Country, body paint, didgeridoos, and scripted lines, is largely a 1970s invention, created by famous Australian Aboriginal Ernie Dingo and refined during the tourism boom.
And when we do these ceremonies, are we even sure that the so-called “traditional owners” are even the right one? Canberra’s “traditional ownership” is disputed between Ngunnawal and Ngambri groups, proving how shaky the whole edifice is. Look to just about any region in the country and I can show you warring groups of Aboriginals who claim that they are the rightful “traditional owners” over the other mob who claim the same thing.
The Financial — and Spiritual — Cost
If you’re Christian? Tough luck. Smoking ceremonies invoke spirits. They’re religious rites, not “cultural displays.” The Presbyterian Church has told its congregations not to participate. Yet we now open Parliament with them, as if the separation of church and state has been tossed into the firepit along with the gum leaves.
And the cost? It’s not just spiritual. The whole Welcome to Country farce also comes with a financial price tag. Freedom of Information documents show single ceremonies cost up to $6,600. Government departments are burning through taxpayer cash for smoke and theatre while remote schools rot and Indigenous literacy flatlines. One smoking ceremony could air-condition a classroom in Arnhem Land. But priorities, right?
Let’s not forget: Australians already voted on this nonsense. In the 2023 Voice referendum, they overwhelmingly rejected the entire race-based agenda. Sixty percent said no. Every state bar the ACT — the same bubble that hosts Parliament — voted it down.
But none of that matters to the elites. It’s not about truth. It’s about control. This is coercive speech. Refuse to recite it and you’re a bigot. Go along with it, and endorse a racial hierarchy where whitey is right at the bottom.
So when Albanese tells you there’s no controversy, he’s not speaking for you. He’s speaking to Canberra, to the elite, to the bureaucrats and boardrooms who recite the lines without believing them.
What we need is a national reset.
Start our events with this: “We gather as free and equal citizens of one Australia.”
And then acknowledge those who have fought and died for our nation.
No smoke. No spirits. No submission.
That’s unity. That’s patriotism. That’s truth.
And that, Prime Minister, is not controversial.
___
Republished with thanks to Nation First. Image via Nation First.
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It’s passive-aggressive behaviour. (Wikipedia: “characterized by a pattern of passive hostility and an avoidance of direct communication … typically used to avoid confrontation, rejection, or criticism.”) If the aboriginal activists want to assert it’s their country (“always was, always will be” etc.) they need to stand up and fight for it. If that’s too hard for them, they need to accept their own surrender. Can’t have it both ways.
While recognizing and respecting the diverse cultural heritage of all its people, Australia should consider the unifying power of one national flag to strengthen its collective identity and promote national harmony.
Australia’s immigration policies must aim to create a cohesive society that values both unity and diversity. By emphasizing English proficiency, loyalty to the Australian nation, economic integration, and respect for other cultures, Australia would build a more integrated and harmonious community for all its residents.
How many of these people performing this pagan ceremony were actual Aborigines? We need to have a better way of recognising aboriginality than “I feel like an Aborigine”.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mia4dKxgC58
Thumbs up to the One Nation senators who turned their back on the faux welcome.
Thank you George for the words of wisdom shared. It would be wonderful if everyone read this account in Parliament house. It remains a very serious issue for Australia to have a Prime Minister who is determined to ‘bulldoze’ a road through the nation in order have his own way.
It means our Federal Govt is intent on using a ‘welcome ceremony’ -that ironically is not working at all to unite people- to undermine the traditional unity we have enjoyed after Federation 1901 and following two world wars, where all fought together to protect the land and to repel a mutual enemy.
The Constitution accepted all people are equal before God, as based on the constitution and the Judeo Christians ethics.
IT is esential that we note what you highlighted George: “It is a great concern also that Canberra’s “traditional ownership” is disputed between Ngunnawal and Ngambri groups, proving how shaky the whole edifice is. Look to just about any region in the country and I can show you warring groups of Aboriginals who claim that they are the rightful “traditional owners” over the other mob who claim the same thing.”
What would happen if the African and Indonesian people who moved to Australia pre the Indigenous era were to come in and take over the land and introduce all their ceremonies and practices also- we would have immense issues with a divided Australia and clan warfare and many arguing about who truly owns the land…
We can’t go back in time and history to work out whose ancestors should be acknowledged….It’s untenable and destructive. Neither can we adopt the ways of those who worship ancestral spirits.
May we return to having ‘a sound mind’ as a nation, where we work towards genuine democratic unity based on respect, equality and care of each citizen and still recognise the true God and Creator who oversees Prime Ministers/kings and all nations. That way we can move forward as one and stop this landslide into disunity and allocate time and money to constructive policies.
My understanding is that welcome to country ceremonies are actually religious ceremonies that are appeasing the spirits of the dead so that one can be “welcomed” into their world (or “country) without harm.
Regarding ownership of the land, sense can only be made of the First Fleet’s arrival and Britain’s claim on Australia if one understands that God is in charge of nations. It is God whose sovereign will brought the First Fleet here, and it is God’s will that the Reverend Richard Johnson was on that Fleet and brought Christianity to Australia. He also established the first schools in Australia which were Christian-based, and he held the first Christian service in this land which all First Fleet personnel (officials, soldiers, sailors, convicts, everyone) had to attend. The land was full of dark satanic rituals, extreme lack of industry and productivity, and God was intent on delivering the land from all of that.
That is why Australia Day is correctly celebrated on 26 January, although a case could be made to celebrate the first Sunday in February as Australia Day as this was when the first Christian service was held in 1788.
See also the article by Rodney Rivers (a personal friend of mine and my family), about the connection between smoking ceremonies, evil spirits, and the terrible effects that they have in people’s lives. I’ve just re-read it. It’s number 4 in today’s Hall of Fame, in the column to the right of the main panel. There are about 30 appreciative comments. I can agree heartily with them, having spent much of my life since 1961 as a linguist and Bible Translator, working with and for Aborigines, and having had to deal with evil spirits. You can ignore the 2 or 3 negative comments — I can assure you that the people who made them do not know what they are talking about. As for the tour guide who said that the smoking ceremony was to drive evil spirits away, Satan always was and always will be a liar. That is exactly the sort of lie you can expect the spirits to tell. We are warned in the Scriptures to test the spirits, not to just believe them.
the main purpose of welcome is twofold
one is the usual customary welcome, just that, nice to have you here, hope you enjoy it
the second is a reminder of who has presided over the continent for 40 millenia, who cared for it, who understands it and who has a unique connection almost destroyed by modernity
only a hard hearted angry oppositional child would fight that
it is considered far more legitimate by modern australia than a church that hates, divides and acts with fear and avarice and dreary miserable denial of cultures other than there own
of course youre furious george
one of the reasons george is not welcomed to country any more is because the australian people felt he did not represent them or their interests
george can now choose where he goes and who he meets, he is under no obligation
australian public servants are under the obligation to participate because that is what we expect as a culture
its george who is out of step here and his inabilty to attract votes and keep his seat underlined this