Mt Claremont Dreaming

Nice. With exemplary back door documentation by Pete F. God these are awful.mtc1mtc2

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About AHC McDonald

Comedian, artist, photographer and critic. From 2007 to 2017 ran the culture and satire site The Worst of Perth
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8 Responses to Mt Claremont Dreaming

  1. Rong1's avatar Rong1 says:

    A pygmy golliwog santa ?

    Like

  2. Plonka's avatar Plonka says:

    On a registered lawn? ………….. What is that on the back of his leg?

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    • Zuben's avatar Zuben says:

      A registered-lawn jockey . Copy to be sent to 21 club c/o madam foreign minister her checked baggage as good will gift on her next trip to the United Nations. Also to help offset travel entitlements . It is what her government really thinks

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  3. GivDBird's avatar GivDBird says:

    Neville Bonner? Where’s the Kingy?

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  4. Russell Woolf's Lovechild's avatar Russell Woolf's Lovechild says:

    Why is he wearing Abbott’s sluggos? Where are the possum skin undies?

    So many questions.

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  5. orbea's avatar orbea says:

    Is that a boomerang or are you just glad to see me?

    Like

  6. Sid viscous's avatar Sid viscous says:

    Classic my friend actually knows a family,names remained anonymous, who own a full stuffed aborigine in their house they proudly have displayed in their study,guess white collar affluent family, with real life stuffed yagan’s cousin with head
    Beats the gnome interpretation

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  7. Emma's avatar Emma says:

    Kevin Rudd may have apologised. John Howard might well have done his best to keep things under wraps. And generations of lawmakers before us have tried, mostly in vain, to help along the way. But Australia’s record on Indigenous issues is, frankly, a litany of disasters, punctuated occasionally with visionary ideas that were shouted down by those who apparently ‘knew better’.
    Which is why, I believe, it’s high time the charge was led to bring the concrete Aborigine back from the brink of extinction – not to celebrate the ignorance and bigotry with which they were first conceived, but to reclaim them as a noble salute to the original inhabitants of the land that we, as Australians, now occupy. It is, quite literally, the least we could do, after all.

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