- Amethyst
- Mar 28, 2004
-
I CANNOT HELP BUT MAKE THE DCSS THREAD A FETID SWAMP OF UNFUN POSTING
plz notice me trunk-senpai
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You can actually hear the rusty gears in open24hours' head failing to turn as he posts.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 03:25
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- Adbot
-
ADBOT LOVES YOU
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#
?
May 28, 2024 15:52
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|
- Birb Katter
- Sep 18, 2010
-
BOATS STOPPED
CARBON TAX AXED
TURNBULL AS PM
LIBERALS WILL BE RE-ELECTED IN A LANDSLIDE
|
Making Plastic Explosives from Bleach posted:
Making Plastic Explosives from Bleach by The Jolly Roger
Potassium chlorate is an extremely volatile explosive compound,
and has been used in the past as the main explosive filler in
grenades, land mines, and mortar rounds by such countries as
France and Germany. Common household bleach contains a small
amount of potassium chlorate, which can be extracted by the
procedure that follows.
First off, you must obtain:
[1] A heat source (hot plate, stove, etc.)
[2] A hydrometer, or battery hydrometer
[3] A large Pyrex, or enameled steel container (to weigh
chemicals)
[4] Potassium chloride (sold as a salt substitute at health and
nutrition stores)
Take one gallon of bleach, place it in the container, and begin
heating it. While this solution heats, weigh out 63 grams of
potassium chloride and add this to the bleach being heated.
Constantly check the solution being heated with the hydrometer,
and boil until you get a reading of 1.3. If using a battery
hydrometer, boil until you read a FULL charge.
Take the solution and allow it to cool in a refrigerator until it
is between room temperature and 0 degrees Celcius. Filter out the
crystals that have formed and save them. Boil this solution again
and cool as before. Filter and save the crystals.
Take the crystals that have been saved, and mix them with
distilled water in the following proportions: 56 grams per 100
milliliters distilled water. Heat this solution until it boils
and allow to cool. Filter the solution and save the crystals that
form upon cooling. This process of purification is called
"fractional crystalization". These crystals should be relatively
pure potassium chlorate.
Powder these to the consistency of face powder, and heat gently to
drive off all moisture.
Now, melt five parts Vaseline with five parts wax. Dissolve this
in white gasoline (camp stove gasoline), and pour this liquid on
90 parts potassium chlorate (the powdered crystals from above)
into a plastic bowl. Knead this liquid into the potassium
chlorate until intimately mixed. Allow all gasoline to evaporate.
Finally, place this explosive into a cool, dry place. Avoid
friction, sulfur, sulfides, and phosphorous compounds. This
explosive is best molded to the desired shape and density of 1.3
grams in a cube and dipped in wax until water proof. These block
type charges guarantee the highest detonation velocity. Also, a
blasting cap of at least a 3 grade must be used.
The presence of the afore mentioned compounds (sulfur, sulfides,
etc.) results in mixtures that are or can become highly sensitive
and will possibly decompose explosively while in storage. You
should never store homemade explosives, and you must use EXTREME
caution at all times while performing the processes in this
article.
You may obtain a catalog of other subject of this nature by
writing:
Information Publishing Co.
Box 10042
Odessa, Texas 79762
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Feb 2, 2016 03:26
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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e: You know the more I think about it, the more I love that you're literally arguing "X exists, therefore X can suffer, therefore X should not exist" which, if you follow the logic, implies that nothing capable of suffering should exist. End all life higher than bacteria FTW
That X exists therefore X can suffer is not, or at least doesn't have to be, an argument against the existence of X.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:28
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- Amethyst
- Mar 28, 2004
-
I CANNOT HELP BUT MAKE THE DCSS THREAD A FETID SWAMP OF UNFUN POSTING
plz notice me trunk-senpai
|
That X exists therefore X can suffer is not, or at least doesn't have to be, an argument against the existence of X.
Interesting. Get this: water is wet. Have you ever thought about this? People call me a stupid idiot when I bring it up in conversation for some reason, I think they're just being unreasonable.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:31
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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I'm pretty sure people would call you that anyway.
Do you disagree with the argument, Amethyst?
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 03:33
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- Amethyst
- Mar 28, 2004
-
I CANNOT HELP BUT MAKE THE DCSS THREAD A FETID SWAMP OF UNFUN POSTING
plz notice me trunk-senpai
|
I'm pretty sure people would call you that anyway.
Do you disagree with the argument, Amethyst?
"If pets didn't exist they wouldn't suffer" is hardly an argument, you insanely obtuse dolt.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:34
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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Well it's not one I would expect people to disagree with.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:35
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- Amethyst
- Mar 28, 2004
-
I CANNOT HELP BUT MAKE THE DCSS THREAD A FETID SWAMP OF UNFUN POSTING
plz notice me trunk-senpai
|
Well it's not one I would expect people to disagree with.
It literally doesn't matter if anyone agrees with it or not. It is a nonsense waste of time statement. It isn't worthy of anything other than as a signifier of your mental triviality
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Feb 2, 2016 03:37
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- Zenithe
- Feb 25, 2013
-
Ask not to whom the Anidavatar belongs; it belongs to thee.
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If fireworks didn't exist, babbies wouldn't complain about not having them.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:40
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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I don't think that's true. People complain about not having things that don't exist all the time.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 03:42
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- Zenithe
- Feb 25, 2013
-
Ask not to whom the Anidavatar belongs; it belongs to thee.
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Sorry, I'm thinking in terms of my hypothetical universe, where nobody will ever think of the concept of fireworks.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:43
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- Laserface
- Dec 24, 2004
-
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My dog is happy as poo poo 24/7.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 03:49
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- Amethyst
- Mar 28, 2004
-
I CANNOT HELP BUT MAKE THE DCSS THREAD A FETID SWAMP OF UNFUN POSTING
plz notice me trunk-senpai
|
My dog is happy as poo poo 24/7.
Sure, but do you agree or disagree that it wouldn't suffer if it didn't exist? Frankly, I'm amazed at the dipshits in this thread who aren't strongly affirming the truth of this thesis.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:52
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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Well I'm responsible with my gun.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 03:52
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- Mr Chips
- Jun 27, 2007
-
Whose arse do I have to blow smoke up to get rid of this baby?
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My dog is happy as poo poo 24/7.
that's because it's an organism that has been genetically modified by humans to express those traits.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:52
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- Wheezle
- Aug 13, 2007
-
420 stop boats erryday
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This thread sure is off to a rollicking start.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 03:54
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- Amethyst
- Mar 28, 2004
-
I CANNOT HELP BUT MAKE THE DCSS THREAD A FETID SWAMP OF UNFUN POSTING
plz notice me trunk-senpai
|
Well I'm responsible with my gun.
Ah yes, pet ownership is exactly like gun ownership. This is a new frontier of thought on The Pet Issue.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:56
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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Ah yes, pet ownership is exactly like gun ownership. This is a new frontier of thought on The Pet Issue.
Tell me about the differences between pet and gun ownership, Amethyst.
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Feb 2, 2016 03:58
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- Cartoon
- Jun 20, 2008
-
poop
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Thread shouldn't loving exist.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:06
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- The Peccadillo
- Mar 4, 2013
-
We Have Important Work To Do
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That pamphlet about Greens terrorism ... it's coming true
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:15
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- The Before Times
- Mar 8, 2014
-
Once upon a time, I would have thrown you halfway to the moon for a crack like that.
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As a straight, white, upper middle class male university student, I am sick and tired of being persecuted and oppressed by what I can only define as a gynocracy.
Also all the troubles men face in society are the fault of MISANDRY and definitely not misogyny.
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:27
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- birdstrike
- Oct 30, 2008
-
i;m gay
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1.5 days in, 3 pages into petchat this thread already sucks
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:31
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- birdstrike
- Oct 30, 2008
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i;m gay
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ocelots are good pets
but even better masters
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:32
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- open24hours
- Jan 7, 2001
-
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So you're saying to fix Australia's problem with racism against Aborigines we should forcibly sterilise them?
...no? Are you?
[EDIT: If Aboriginal people were being kept as pets I'd be calling for an end to the practice though.]
open24hours fucked around with this message at 04:46 on Feb 2, 2016
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:39
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- Zenithe
- Feb 25, 2013
-
Ask not to whom the Anidavatar belongs; it belongs to thee.
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Gun owner pet owner. Oh right, those things are now equatable, carry on handsome gentleman.
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#
?
Feb 2, 2016 04:54
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- CATTASTIC
- Mar 31, 2010
-
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
|
5yo boy allegedly raped on Nauru could be sent back to detention centre, doctor says
A five-year-old boy who was allegedly raped on Nauru is facing the prospect of being returned to the offshore detention centre where his attacker remains.
The revelations come from paediatricians who have detailed their concerns to the ABC about the child and the wellbeing and safety of about 160 other children held in Australia's detention centres.
Paediatrician Karen Zwi said the young child suffered serious mental health problems after the alleged sexual assault.
"Like many other children who are very distressed he regressed, he began bed-wetting, he became very anxious about his mother's wellbeing, he actually began to self-harm, as I've seen several other children do as well and eventually he was transferred over to the mainland for treatment," Dr Zwi said.
She said the child's greatest fear was returning to Nauru.
"That is this huge cloud hanging over him. That he will be returned to an absolutely traumatic and devastating environment for him."
The boy's fate is likely to hang on the result of a High Court decision about a challenge to the Federal Government's policy of sending asylum seekers arriving by boat to detention at centres on Manus Island and Nauru, that will be delivered tomorrow.
If the court case fails, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton has flagged his intentions of sending the group of 160 adults, 37 babies and 54 other children back to Nauru.
Detention 'breaking spirit' of young people
In exclusive interviews, two young women spoke to the ABC, giving first-hand accounts of the horrific conditions children are enduring in offshore detention centres.
One of the girls, Jamilah, 20, from Somalia, said being in detention on Christmas Island had broken her spirit.
"My friends, all of them, they were harming themselves. I tried to be strong and say that was not the right thing I could do," she said.
"I was thinking killing myself was the last thing I could do in my life."
Another girl, Assiya, who was held on Nauru for more than 12 months, told the ABC how she attempted to kill herself after daily taunts from her captors and being physically assaulted by a guard.
"I used to be a very strong person and always tried to think positive but they really break me down. There was a point I couldn't think of life anymore," she said.
"Sometimes the guards bring video of the Prime Minister and they make us watch it, saying you will never call Australia home. Same thing that they tell us every day.
"The more you try to do something, the more you get upset and hurt and treated like animals."
She said she attempted to hang herself with a scarf and was saved by a friend from dying.
A mincing machine' of traumatic events
After doctors raised concerns about the mental health of Assiya and Jamilah, both were transferred to the mainland for treatment.
But they face the prospect of being returned to detention at any time.
Dr Zwi said children kept in offshore detention had "been through a mincing machine".
"They've had one traumatic event after another. Sometimes I feel they are broken into little bits and it's really hard to put the pieces back together again," she said.
"It's almost impossible to help them to heal and recover if they know that they're going to go back to that environment."
Average detention time for children stretches to 14 months
Around 160 children are being held in detention by Australian authorities.
The figure has dropped from 2013, when the number of children detained reached almost 2,000. But children are being held for much longer, an average of 14 months.
On a visit to Nauru, paediatrician Hasantha Gunasekera said he was horrified to see how the children were suffering.
"We hardly ever see young children and adolescents so traumatised by life that they would want to take their own life," Dr Gunasekera said.
"But in Nauru and in detention centres where kids have been kept, sometimes for most of their life, we see very young children who just can't take it anymore and try to kill themselves or wanting to hurt themselves. Or saying things like, 'I may as well just jump off the roof'.
"There's no point anymore. I had one parent say to me, 'I brought my kids here for them to be safe, not to learn how to commit suicide'. What do you say to a parent like that?"
Doctors speak out despite jail threat
Dr Gunasekera and Dr Zwi know they could be charged and jailed for speaking out about what they have seen in Australia's detention centres.
Under the Border Force Act passed in 2014, anyone working in immigration detention, including doctors, faces two years' imprisonment for revealing details of what goes on there.
"Paediatricians have a responsibility to make sure the system stops damaging children and that's why many of us have chosen to speak out," Dr Zwi said.
Dr Gunasekera said if Australians knew what was happening in offshore detention, they would be shocked.
"If the Australian people knew actually what was happening, if they saw the trauma on the faces of the kids like we saw," he said.
"That's why there is secrecy around every part of this policy, it's because its so shameful."
A spokesman for Mr Dutton said he would not be making any comments about the High Court challenge until after the announcement.
"We will wait to see what the court decides and make comment after that," he said.
He said the medical attention given to people in Australian-run detention centres was "pretty much what you get in Australia".
The spokesman said issues relating to doctors speaking out under the Border Force Act were dealt with last year and that it was made clear that the provisions were needed to protect sensitive information.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-02/boy-allegedly-raped-on-nauru-could-be-sent-back-to-detention/7132608
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#
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Feb 2, 2016 04:59
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- Recoome
- Nov 9, 2013
-
Matter of fact, I'm salty now.
|
5yo boy allegedly raped on Nauru could be sent back to detention centre, doctor says
A five-year-old boy who was allegedly raped on Nauru is facing the prospect of being returned to the offshore detention centre where his attacker remains.
The revelations come from paediatricians who have detailed their concerns to the ABC about the child and the wellbeing and safety of about 160 other children held in Australia's detention centres.
Paediatrician Karen Zwi said the young child suffered serious mental health problems after the alleged sexual assault.
"Like many other children who are very distressed he regressed, he began bed-wetting, he became very anxious about his mother's wellbeing, he actually began to self-harm, as I've seen several other children do as well and eventually he was transferred over to the mainland for treatment," Dr Zwi said.
She said the child's greatest fear was returning to Nauru.
"That is this huge cloud hanging over him. That he will be returned to an absolutely traumatic and devastating environment for him."
The boy's fate is likely to hang on the result of a High Court decision about a challenge to the Federal Government's policy of sending asylum seekers arriving by boat to detention at centres on Manus Island and Nauru, that will be delivered tomorrow.
If the court case fails, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton has flagged his intentions of sending the group of 160 adults, 37 babies and 54 other children back to Nauru.
Detention 'breaking spirit' of young people
In exclusive interviews, two young women spoke to the ABC, giving first-hand accounts of the horrific conditions children are enduring in offshore detention centres.
One of the girls, Jamilah, 20, from Somalia, said being in detention on Christmas Island had broken her spirit.
"My friends, all of them, they were harming themselves. I tried to be strong and say that was not the right thing I could do," she said.
"I was thinking killing myself was the last thing I could do in my life."
Another girl, Assiya, who was held on Nauru for more than 12 months, told the ABC how she attempted to kill herself after daily taunts from her captors and being physically assaulted by a guard.
"I used to be a very strong person and always tried to think positive but they really break me down. There was a point I couldn't think of life anymore," she said.
"Sometimes the guards bring video of the Prime Minister and they make us watch it, saying you will never call Australia home. Same thing that they tell us every day.
"The more you try to do something, the more you get upset and hurt and treated like animals."
She said she attempted to hang herself with a scarf and was saved by a friend from dying.
A mincing machine' of traumatic events
After doctors raised concerns about the mental health of Assiya and Jamilah, both were transferred to the mainland for treatment.
But they face the prospect of being returned to detention at any time.
Dr Zwi said children kept in offshore detention had "been through a mincing machine".
"They've had one traumatic event after another. Sometimes I feel they are broken into little bits and it's really hard to put the pieces back together again," she said.
"It's almost impossible to help them to heal and recover if they know that they're going to go back to that environment."
Average detention time for children stretches to 14 months
Around 160 children are being held in detention by Australian authorities.
The figure has dropped from 2013, when the number of children detained reached almost 2,000. But children are being held for much longer, an average of 14 months.
On a visit to Nauru, paediatrician Hasantha Gunasekera said he was horrified to see how the children were suffering.
"We hardly ever see young children and adolescents so traumatised by life that they would want to take their own life," Dr Gunasekera said.
"But in Nauru and in detention centres where kids have been kept, sometimes for most of their life, we see very young children who just can't take it anymore and try to kill themselves or wanting to hurt themselves. Or saying things like, 'I may as well just jump off the roof'.
"There's no point anymore. I had one parent say to me, 'I brought my kids here for them to be safe, not to learn how to commit suicide'. What do you say to a parent like that?"
Doctors speak out despite jail threat
Dr Gunasekera and Dr Zwi know they could be charged and jailed for speaking out about what they have seen in Australia's detention centres.
Under the Border Force Act passed in 2014, anyone working in immigration detention, including doctors, faces two years' imprisonment for revealing details of what goes on there.
"Paediatricians have a responsibility to make sure the system stops damaging children and that's why many of us have chosen to speak out," Dr Zwi said.
Dr Gunasekera said if Australians knew what was happening in offshore detention, they would be shocked.
"If the Australian people knew actually what was happening, if they saw the trauma on the faces of the kids like we saw," he said.
"That's why there is secrecy around every part of this policy, it's because its so shameful."
A spokesman for Mr Dutton said he would not be making any comments about the High Court challenge until after the announcement.
"We will wait to see what the court decides and make comment after that," he said.
He said the medical attention given to people in Australian-run detention centres was "pretty much what you get in Australia".
The spokesman said issues relating to doctors speaking out under the Border Force Act were dealt with last year and that it was made clear that the provisions were needed to protect sensitive information.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-02/boy-allegedly-raped-on-nauru-could-be-sent-back-to-detention/7132608
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#
?
Feb 2, 2016 05:06
|
|
- Birb Katter
- Sep 18, 2010
-
BOATS STOPPED
CARBON TAX AXED
TURNBULL AS PM
LIBERALS WILL BE RE-ELECTED IN A LANDSLIDE
|
5yo boy allegedly raped on Nauru could be sent back to detention centre, doctor says
A five-year-old boy who was allegedly raped on Nauru is facing the prospect of being returned to the offshore detention centre where his attacker remains.
The revelations come from paediatricians who have detailed their concerns to the ABC about the child and the wellbeing and safety of about 160 other children held in Australia's detention centres.
Paediatrician Karen Zwi said the young child suffered serious mental health problems after the alleged sexual assault.
"Like many other children who are very distressed he regressed, he began bed-wetting, he became very anxious about his mother's wellbeing, he actually began to self-harm, as I've seen several other children do as well and eventually he was transferred over to the mainland for treatment," Dr Zwi said.
She said the child's greatest fear was returning to Nauru.
"That is this huge cloud hanging over him. That he will be returned to an absolutely traumatic and devastating environment for him."
The boy's fate is likely to hang on the result of a High Court decision about a challenge to the Federal Government's policy of sending asylum seekers arriving by boat to detention at centres on Manus Island and Nauru, that will be delivered tomorrow.
If the court case fails, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton has flagged his intentions of sending the group of 160 adults, 37 babies and 54 other children back to Nauru.
Detention 'breaking spirit' of young people
In exclusive interviews, two young women spoke to the ABC, giving first-hand accounts of the horrific conditions children are enduring in offshore detention centres.
One of the girls, Jamilah, 20, from Somalia, said being in detention on Christmas Island had broken her spirit.
"My friends, all of them, they were harming themselves. I tried to be strong and say that was not the right thing I could do," she said.
"I was thinking killing myself was the last thing I could do in my life."
Another girl, Assiya, who was held on Nauru for more than 12 months, told the ABC how she attempted to kill herself after daily taunts from her captors and being physically assaulted by a guard.
"I used to be a very strong person and always tried to think positive but they really break me down. There was a point I couldn't think of life anymore," she said.
"Sometimes the guards bring video of the Prime Minister and they make us watch it, saying you will never call Australia home. Same thing that they tell us every day.
"The more you try to do something, the more you get upset and hurt and treated like animals."
She said she attempted to hang herself with a scarf and was saved by a friend from dying.
A mincing machine' of traumatic events
After doctors raised concerns about the mental health of Assiya and Jamilah, both were transferred to the mainland for treatment.
But they face the prospect of being returned to detention at any time.
Dr Zwi said children kept in offshore detention had "been through a mincing machine".
"They've had one traumatic event after another. Sometimes I feel they are broken into little bits and it's really hard to put the pieces back together again," she said.
"It's almost impossible to help them to heal and recover if they know that they're going to go back to that environment."
Average detention time for children stretches to 14 months
Around 160 children are being held in detention by Australian authorities.
The figure has dropped from 2013, when the number of children detained reached almost 2,000. But children are being held for much longer, an average of 14 months.
On a visit to Nauru, paediatrician Hasantha Gunasekera said he was horrified to see how the children were suffering.
"We hardly ever see young children and adolescents so traumatised by life that they would want to take their own life," Dr Gunasekera said.
"But in Nauru and in detention centres where kids have been kept, sometimes for most of their life, we see very young children who just can't take it anymore and try to kill themselves or wanting to hurt themselves. Or saying things like, 'I may as well just jump off the roof'.
"There's no point anymore. I had one parent say to me, 'I brought my kids here for them to be safe, not to learn how to commit suicide'. What do you say to a parent like that?"
Doctors speak out despite jail threat
Dr Gunasekera and Dr Zwi know they could be charged and jailed for speaking out about what they have seen in Australia's detention centres.
Under the Border Force Act passed in 2014, anyone working in immigration detention, including doctors, faces two years' imprisonment for revealing details of what goes on there.
"Paediatricians have a responsibility to make sure the system stops damaging children and that's why many of us have chosen to speak out," Dr Zwi said.
Dr Gunasekera said if Australians knew what was happening in offshore detention, they would be shocked.
"If the Australian people knew actually what was happening, if they saw the trauma on the faces of the kids like we saw," he said.
"That's why there is secrecy around every part of this policy, it's because its so shameful."
A spokesman for Mr Dutton said he would not be making any comments about the High Court challenge until after the announcement.
"We will wait to see what the court decides and make comment after that," he said.
He said the medical attention given to people in Australian-run detention centres was "pretty much what you get in Australia".
The spokesman said issues relating to doctors speaking out under the Border Force Act were dealt with last year and that it was made clear that the provisions were needed to protect sensitive information.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-02-02/boy-allegedly-raped-on-nauru-could-be-sent-back-to-detention/7132608
I thought the petgun chat was bad but it turns out Australia is worse.
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#
?
Feb 2, 2016 05:07
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|
- Adbot
-
ADBOT LOVES YOU
|
|
#
?
May 28, 2024 15:52
|
|
- CATTASTIC
- Mar 31, 2010
-
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
|
PUP.png
|
#
?
Feb 2, 2016 05:16
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