If Australians believe the resounding defeat of the Voice referendum means the issues at the heart of the question put to them will now be cast aside in favour of so-called practical solutions then they are deluded.
No voters can convince themselves that they are not racist, but when it came to confronting the facts of how this country was settled, they turned away.
They could not face the lie of a vacant country and recognise its original inhabitants in a document that chose to exclude them.
They could not give government a means to listen directly to First Nations’ needs or listen themselves to pleas to be understood.
They were all too willing to find reasons, many from the social media sewer, to say no.
Chief Minister Andrew Barr prefaced his speech to the Canberra Business Chamber yesterday (19 October) with a reflection on the result, saying it was not a vote against reconciliation and against closing the gap, and these issues would not go away.
“These all remain important issues. We will need to chart a new path,” he said.
“I think we can do so in our jurisdiction, confident that this community would want to contribute and make a difference, and that’s something that we will certainly be focused on in the weeks, months and years ahead.
“But the issues can’t just disappear, and they won’t.”
He is right, but clearly many Australians, particularly in the regions, would like just that.
They might like First Nations to be better off, but not too better off. They might support government efforts to improve Indigenous health and living conditions, but like their colonial forebears, are quick to question the amount of money being spent on people who apparently won’t help themselves.
And above all, many No voters won’t face the truth about prior occupation of this country and how their ancestors came to possess the land and pass on its benefits to their own.
They were more than happy to see the likes of Senator Jacinta Price, the new-right wing pin-up girl, front the No campaign promoting a resurgent assimilationist message to a white Australia, who may love their black footy players and music stars as long they’re not made uncomfortable about the ongoing effects of what happened to their heroes’ families not that long ago.
Whatever you do, don’t mention the (frontier) war.
Senator Price made them feel comfortable with her unity pitch, disputing the fact of intergenerational trauma and a call for her brothers and sisters to just pull themselves up by their bootstraps, if they have them, in the greatest country on earth.
Simplistic stuff that goes down well in many a local Liberal branch, but was not received well in the communities she purports to represent.
Some Indigenous people might agree – forget the past and the self-determination claptrap and embrace the opportunities of the new Australia.
But the reality is the past cannot be forgotten no matter how much people try to stamp it down, or damn it up. It will keep oozing up to be dealt with.
Reducing the Australian predicament to a discussion about material gains does not take the nation forward and won’t heal its spirit.
Last month, I travelled to the Red Centre for the first time and experienced the vastness of the interior, the majesty of the landscape, touched the Rock and felt the weight of time.
In Alice Springs, I heard an ancient language being spoken on the main street, listened to the stories of how the white man came to this land and terminated a way of life that had been undisturbed for thousands of years in a generation.
All the more reason for the federal government to pursue truth in political advertising laws to rein in the propagandists and trolls bent on manipulating and debasing our democratic system.
Without a strong response, expect every public policy proposal will be put through this mincer.
The referendum result has broken hearts and unleashed forces that do us no honour. I live in hope that many will come to have second thoughts about where they chose to stand on 14 October 2023.