1 00:00:00,440 --> 00:00:03,400 Speaker 1: Because, as I said, yesterday, the Minister for Territory Family's 2 00:00:03,480 --> 00:00:06,320 Speaker 1: Kate Warden, she gave an update on the construction on 3 00:00:06,400 --> 00:00:09,360 Speaker 1: the new Darwin Youth Justice Center, following what has been 4 00:00:09,400 --> 00:00:13,360 Speaker 1: called a lengthy consultation and design phase. Now, when completed 5 00:00:13,360 --> 00:00:16,000 Speaker 1: next year, the center's going to deliver what the government 6 00:00:16,320 --> 00:00:21,120 Speaker 1: has described as the most progressive youth justice infrastructure in Australia, 7 00:00:21,400 --> 00:00:25,960 Speaker 1: having been informed by extensive stakeholder consultation. Now, for some 8 00:00:26,200 --> 00:00:28,720 Speaker 1: this needs to happen sooner, and there has been calls 9 00:00:28,760 --> 00:00:31,760 Speaker 1: in recent weeks for the center to be shut immediately. 10 00:00:32,040 --> 00:00:35,000 Speaker 1: The Minister held an event yesterday, a media event at 11 00:00:35,000 --> 00:00:37,840 Speaker 1: that new site and it was crashed by youth justice 12 00:00:37,880 --> 00:00:41,680 Speaker 1: advocates and also John Lawrence. Sc Now John Lawrence joins 13 00:00:41,680 --> 00:00:44,480 Speaker 1: me in the studio right now. Good morning to you, John, 14 00:00:44,560 --> 00:00:47,879 Speaker 1: Good morning Kitty John. Why did you crash that event yesterday? 15 00:00:47,960 --> 00:00:51,479 Speaker 2: Well, it's just part of our movements activities. Really. I 16 00:00:51,560 --> 00:00:55,040 Speaker 2: was interested personally in actually hearing the presentation, so I 17 00:00:55,200 --> 00:00:58,640 Speaker 2: just drove in. That was your key. But then they 18 00:00:58,760 --> 00:01:01,560 Speaker 2: asked me to leave because I was invited, and they 19 00:01:01,840 --> 00:01:03,760 Speaker 2: sort of pulled the wool over my eyes or they 20 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:05,400 Speaker 2: got the better off me by saying that you didn't 21 00:01:05,440 --> 00:01:07,640 Speaker 2: have a crash helmet and it was an on site 22 00:01:07,720 --> 00:01:09,360 Speaker 2: thing which was in breach of the work health. Like 23 00:01:09,400 --> 00:01:11,399 Speaker 2: asked them for a crash helmet and then they refused me. 24 00:01:11,440 --> 00:01:13,800 Speaker 2: They said, you're not on the invite list. But that's 25 00:01:13,800 --> 00:01:16,360 Speaker 2: what civil disobedience is all about, direct action, and that's 26 00:01:16,360 --> 00:01:18,160 Speaker 2: what I've chosen to do at this stage of my 27 00:01:18,319 --> 00:01:21,039 Speaker 2: career thirty five years. And the reason I do it 28 00:01:21,080 --> 00:01:23,240 Speaker 2: is because I don't see any alternative to it, because 29 00:01:23,240 --> 00:01:26,160 Speaker 2: we're in such a mess. And let me just say 30 00:01:26,160 --> 00:01:32,800 Speaker 2: this firstly, and I'm not being critical. You're busier than me. 31 00:01:33,040 --> 00:01:34,880 Speaker 2: I just wanted to record I'm a bit disappointed that 32 00:01:34,880 --> 00:01:36,880 Speaker 2: I'm only going to get ten minutes with you to 33 00:01:37,000 --> 00:01:41,200 Speaker 2: discuss an issue which I consider extremely important. And the 34 00:01:41,520 --> 00:01:44,040 Speaker 2: reason I consider it really important. It's not about politics, 35 00:01:44,400 --> 00:01:48,000 Speaker 2: it's not about logistics and times, it's not about the law. 36 00:01:48,440 --> 00:01:51,600 Speaker 2: This issue that we are demonstrating about is a moral issue. 37 00:01:51,680 --> 00:01:56,520 Speaker 2: It's an ethical issue. It's about being decent in our society. 38 00:01:56,800 --> 00:02:00,280 Speaker 2: And it's about another thing, it's about children. And it's 39 00:02:00,320 --> 00:02:03,560 Speaker 2: the combination of those two things that makes us do 40 00:02:03,720 --> 00:02:07,120 Speaker 2: what we are doing to try and get some decency 41 00:02:07,320 --> 00:02:11,639 Speaker 2: injected into a system. Now, can I ask you forgive 42 00:02:11,639 --> 00:02:12,680 Speaker 2: me a bit? Have you got children? 43 00:02:12,720 --> 00:02:14,320 Speaker 3: I do, I've got two young ones. 44 00:02:14,160 --> 00:02:17,560 Speaker 2: Right, congratulations. Is there anything more precious in your life 45 00:02:17,560 --> 00:02:18,160 Speaker 2: than your children? 46 00:02:18,320 --> 00:02:20,760 Speaker 3: Nothing at all more precious in my lofe than my children? 47 00:02:20,800 --> 00:02:23,200 Speaker 2: That's right. And I've got four, and I'm the same, 48 00:02:23,240 --> 00:02:25,680 Speaker 2: and we're virtually most of us are like that. And 49 00:02:25,720 --> 00:02:28,040 Speaker 2: that's the story of man. That's the story of Homo 50 00:02:28,120 --> 00:02:35,079 Speaker 2: sapiens for all over the world historically Japan, Bolivia, France, Scotland, Australia, 51 00:02:35,120 --> 00:02:40,200 Speaker 2: indigenous society. Our most precious, precious commodity is our children. 52 00:02:40,360 --> 00:02:43,280 Speaker 2: And because human beings are so vulnerable when they're young, 53 00:02:43,560 --> 00:02:46,000 Speaker 2: we have a special relationship. We're not like the animals 54 00:02:46,120 --> 00:02:48,760 Speaker 2: where they can survive in a short period. So there 55 00:02:48,800 --> 00:02:51,679 Speaker 2: is nothing more valuable in this world and children. And 56 00:02:51,800 --> 00:02:53,760 Speaker 2: so this is what this is about. Now, Can I 57 00:02:53,919 --> 00:02:57,280 Speaker 2: just In Nazi Germany, there was a famous moral past 58 00:02:57,280 --> 00:02:58,720 Speaker 2: that I don't know if you've heard of, from Dietrich 59 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:02,079 Speaker 2: Bonhoffer was famous. He took it up to Hitler, he 60 00:03:02,120 --> 00:03:04,120 Speaker 2: was the head of the Lutheran Church, and they eventually 61 00:03:04,160 --> 00:03:07,120 Speaker 2: executed him in a concentration camp weeks before it was 62 00:03:07,160 --> 00:03:10,880 Speaker 2: liberated in nineteen forty five, and he said, the test 63 00:03:10,960 --> 00:03:13,880 Speaker 2: of the morality of a society is what it does 64 00:03:13,919 --> 00:03:17,920 Speaker 2: for its children. And I completely endorse that, John. 65 00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:20,000 Speaker 1: I know there's going to be people listening right now 66 00:03:20,000 --> 00:03:23,200 Speaker 1: who are thinking to themselves though, you know, we're talking 67 00:03:23,200 --> 00:03:27,200 Speaker 1: about children who where are their parents when they're breaking 68 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:29,760 Speaker 1: into people's homes, or where are their parents or where 69 00:03:29,800 --> 00:03:34,320 Speaker 1: are their families? You know, when they're committing crimes that 70 00:03:34,320 --> 00:03:37,720 Speaker 1: they're terrorizing other kids in some cases. 71 00:03:37,320 --> 00:03:40,360 Speaker 2: Well, we'll think about this. I consider a lot of 72 00:03:40,400 --> 00:03:46,960 Speaker 2: these responses deflections from the fact that takes me to 73 00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:50,000 Speaker 2: the point of almost arrest yesterday, which is the fact 74 00:03:50,000 --> 00:03:52,920 Speaker 2: that we are still treating children in down Dale in 75 00:03:52,960 --> 00:03:55,240 Speaker 2: a horrible, horrible way. And I hear what these people 76 00:03:55,240 --> 00:03:57,360 Speaker 2: are saying, and I also hear what they're saying about 77 00:03:57,360 --> 00:03:59,680 Speaker 2: the parents. But the reality of it is is that 78 00:03:59,720 --> 00:04:03,360 Speaker 2: those parents, we're in the same boat as the eleven 79 00:04:03,440 --> 00:04:07,040 Speaker 2: year old that I'm representing. They were from a socially dysfunctional, 80 00:04:07,360 --> 00:04:10,440 Speaker 2: horrendous upbringing, and a lot of it is that stream 81 00:04:10,440 --> 00:04:13,600 Speaker 2: of Australian society which is quite unique and it's that 82 00:04:13,600 --> 00:04:16,839 Speaker 2: that's the stolen generation component which we have a large 83 00:04:16,880 --> 00:04:19,760 Speaker 2: part of our society, and that goes right back to 84 00:04:19,800 --> 00:04:23,480 Speaker 2: the beginning when children were taken stolen and they were 85 00:04:23,520 --> 00:04:26,320 Speaker 2: placed in camps. I was in this the Reted Dixon 86 00:04:26,400 --> 00:04:30,680 Speaker 2: Royal Commission, where horrific things happen to those children, rapes, 87 00:04:30,760 --> 00:04:35,159 Speaker 2: brutality and so forth. And most of these survivors have 88 00:04:35,279 --> 00:04:39,280 Speaker 2: been seriously affected with generational trauma. So the parents of 89 00:04:39,320 --> 00:04:42,279 Speaker 2: these eleven year olds have come from a similar upbringing 90 00:04:42,320 --> 00:04:45,640 Speaker 2: as well, and it's a harvest of our neglect and 91 00:04:45,680 --> 00:04:48,680 Speaker 2: the harvest of our history that we're trying to deal with. 92 00:04:48,880 --> 00:04:52,080 Speaker 1: So, John, though, how do when we're talking about that 93 00:04:52,120 --> 00:04:55,480 Speaker 1: generational trauma and we are talking about, you know, as 94 00:04:55,520 --> 00:04:59,359 Speaker 1: you've said, the care of children, how do we then explain, 95 00:04:59,520 --> 00:05:02,440 Speaker 1: you know, to some of these families that are indeed 96 00:05:02,440 --> 00:05:06,080 Speaker 1: the victims of these children, how do we explain to 97 00:05:06,120 --> 00:05:08,560 Speaker 1: them that, well, you know, you've just got to be 98 00:05:08,640 --> 00:05:12,000 Speaker 1: patient and hope that you know, the youth justice system 99 00:05:12,080 --> 00:05:15,440 Speaker 1: or that the system helps in some way, and that 100 00:05:15,480 --> 00:05:17,400 Speaker 1: you don't become a victim of crime again. 101 00:05:17,520 --> 00:05:20,280 Speaker 2: With great difficulty, because the way we're running the criminal 102 00:05:20,360 --> 00:05:23,440 Speaker 2: justice system produces a certainty, which is when these kids 103 00:05:23,440 --> 00:05:25,080 Speaker 2: get out with don Dale, they're going to do exactly 104 00:05:25,120 --> 00:05:27,520 Speaker 2: the same. So there's nothing I can say that's going 105 00:05:27,560 --> 00:05:31,560 Speaker 2: to persuade them or assuage their frustration and their anger. 106 00:05:31,920 --> 00:05:34,400 Speaker 2: So it's not working. It's a broken system. But can 107 00:05:34,440 --> 00:05:37,200 Speaker 2: I just go back? Because this is why we're doing it. 108 00:05:37,720 --> 00:05:39,599 Speaker 2: This is why we're doing it. I'm doing it because 109 00:05:39,640 --> 00:05:41,599 Speaker 2: I was brought into a case to represent an eleven 110 00:05:41,640 --> 00:05:44,480 Speaker 2: year old right and a eleven year old boy from 111 00:05:44,520 --> 00:05:47,839 Speaker 2: that stream of stolen generation whose both parents were from 112 00:05:47,839 --> 00:05:51,760 Speaker 2: that stream of stolen generation. Both his parents were drug addicted. 113 00:05:51,839 --> 00:05:55,800 Speaker 2: Both his parents engaged in heavy domestic violence, which he 114 00:05:55,880 --> 00:05:59,159 Speaker 2: witnessed from under the table at times. Both his parents 115 00:05:59,160 --> 00:06:01,839 Speaker 2: went in and out of jay. His upbringing was a nightmare. Right. 116 00:06:02,320 --> 00:06:05,359 Speaker 2: Psychologists have tested this kid. They've said that his brain 117 00:06:05,480 --> 00:06:07,839 Speaker 2: is damaged, which can happen when you're sitting in the 118 00:06:07,839 --> 00:06:11,599 Speaker 2: most stressful living room in history, watching what you're watching. 119 00:06:11,920 --> 00:06:15,960 Speaker 2: The brain gets bruised that they go into fight or flight, 120 00:06:16,360 --> 00:06:19,400 Speaker 2: and this is science, and then that affects the behavior 121 00:06:19,440 --> 00:06:23,760 Speaker 2: accordingly afterwards. So they become extremely impetuous and impulsive, and 122 00:06:23,800 --> 00:06:26,040 Speaker 2: they run away from home, etc. So this is where 123 00:06:26,040 --> 00:06:29,960 Speaker 2: he's come from. Children aren't born bad. You know, I've 124 00:06:29,960 --> 00:06:32,599 Speaker 2: got four kids. If one of my four kids was 125 00:06:32,640 --> 00:06:36,640 Speaker 2: putting his shoes at the age of two, he'd be him. 126 00:06:37,560 --> 00:06:41,200 Speaker 2: That's the actual explanation. We know that. So what happens 127 00:06:41,200 --> 00:06:44,359 Speaker 2: to him in the NT in twenty twenty two after 128 00:06:44,440 --> 00:06:47,640 Speaker 2: a royal commission after four corners, he gets put into 129 00:06:47,680 --> 00:06:50,760 Speaker 2: Bara My Prison, and his experience in Bearing My Prison 130 00:06:50,800 --> 00:06:54,200 Speaker 2: I have to highlight it goes like this. He's kept 131 00:06:54,200 --> 00:06:57,320 Speaker 2: in there for just over three months. Bear in My 132 00:06:57,360 --> 00:07:00,960 Speaker 2: Prison is a derelict adult jail have been bulldozed in 133 00:07:01,000 --> 00:07:07,359 Speaker 2: twenty twelve. Not only is he in a derelict, dysfunctional prison, 134 00:07:07,880 --> 00:07:10,760 Speaker 2: but he's kept in what was B Block, the maximum 135 00:07:10,760 --> 00:07:14,720 Speaker 2: security section where Andy Albury sat, where Martin Leech sat, 136 00:07:14,920 --> 00:07:18,360 Speaker 2: where Bradley Murdock sat. He's placed in a cell which 137 00:07:18,360 --> 00:07:20,600 Speaker 2: could very well have been occupied by somebody like that. 138 00:07:20,920 --> 00:07:23,480 Speaker 2: The cell is three by two meters. It's got nothing 139 00:07:23,480 --> 00:07:25,840 Speaker 2: in it except a toilet in a shower which he 140 00:07:25,880 --> 00:07:29,040 Speaker 2: tells me was leaking. He's got a broken television which 141 00:07:29,040 --> 00:07:31,840 Speaker 2: doesn't work in this eleven year old we keep him, 142 00:07:32,040 --> 00:07:34,200 Speaker 2: you and me in the government. We keep him in 143 00:07:34,240 --> 00:07:38,840 Speaker 2: that cell for twenty hours a day, in isolation for 144 00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:40,560 Speaker 2: seven days in a row. 145 00:07:41,400 --> 00:07:42,280 Speaker 3: What is the options? 146 00:07:42,360 --> 00:07:46,360 Speaker 2: John, Please please don't ask that question. Please think about 147 00:07:46,400 --> 00:07:50,120 Speaker 2: what I've just described. Think about what's going through that child. 148 00:07:50,280 --> 00:07:54,080 Speaker 2: That's a damaged child that's placed in a cell like that. 149 00:07:54,120 --> 00:07:56,440 Speaker 2: What's going to happen to each damage? It's going to 150 00:07:56,520 --> 00:08:00,360 Speaker 2: get worse? Clearly, So that's what we're doing now. That's 151 00:08:00,400 --> 00:08:04,040 Speaker 2: why at the point of being arrested, because that's just 152 00:08:04,120 --> 00:08:07,480 Speaker 2: a no goal. I can't tolerate that. I live in 153 00:08:07,480 --> 00:08:12,960 Speaker 2: this town and I will not countenance that barbarism, that backwardism. 154 00:08:13,240 --> 00:08:15,360 Speaker 2: That's worse than what it was ten years ago. That's 155 00:08:15,400 --> 00:08:19,000 Speaker 2: worse than don Dale, that's worse than twenty years ago. 156 00:08:19,320 --> 00:08:22,560 Speaker 2: We are deteriorating and somebody needs to put the fruit 157 00:08:22,600 --> 00:08:24,720 Speaker 2: in the door and see enough is enough. 158 00:08:25,040 --> 00:08:27,720 Speaker 1: So, John, that's obviously what you were trying to do yesterday. 159 00:08:27,760 --> 00:08:30,200 Speaker 1: You know, you were trying to Christmas. You have been 160 00:08:30,200 --> 00:08:33,000 Speaker 1: doing it for quite some time, been very vocal on that. 161 00:08:33,720 --> 00:08:35,800 Speaker 1: But so where do we go from here? Because the 162 00:08:35,840 --> 00:08:38,920 Speaker 1: minister has basically said, you know that it would be 163 00:08:39,000 --> 00:08:42,720 Speaker 1: a waste of time and money. Essentially to you know, 164 00:08:42,800 --> 00:08:45,960 Speaker 1: to go backwards and to you know, to to be 165 00:08:46,080 --> 00:08:48,640 Speaker 1: taking those kids sent out to the Howard Springs quarantine 166 00:08:48,960 --> 00:08:53,600 Speaker 1: facility for example, which I know is something that John 167 00:08:53,640 --> 00:08:56,920 Speaker 1: Patterson had raised. So where do we go from here? 168 00:08:57,000 --> 00:09:00,280 Speaker 1: Because there's an expectation from the community that if needs 169 00:09:00,320 --> 00:09:03,319 Speaker 1: break the law and if they are terrorizing other law 170 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:07,800 Speaker 1: a boding citizens, that there is well punishment. But people 171 00:09:07,880 --> 00:09:09,720 Speaker 1: also expect them to be rehabilitated. 172 00:09:09,840 --> 00:09:11,640 Speaker 2: Yeah, well that's not going to happen at the moment. 173 00:09:11,880 --> 00:09:16,120 Speaker 2: So we need a rehabilitative center. But please, can I 174 00:09:16,520 --> 00:09:21,760 Speaker 2: just implore or submit to the community to acknowledge that 175 00:09:21,800 --> 00:09:25,840 Speaker 2: what I am describing and what we are doing as 176 00:09:25,840 --> 00:09:30,640 Speaker 2: a community is all wrong and shouldn't be continued, and 177 00:09:30,679 --> 00:09:34,000 Speaker 2: it should end now because look at the self harm 178 00:09:34,000 --> 00:09:36,199 Speaker 2: that's been happening in there. It's going through the roof, 179 00:09:36,679 --> 00:09:39,600 Speaker 2: it really is. In the last six months rather June 180 00:09:39,600 --> 00:09:43,840 Speaker 2: to July this year, ninety three incidents of self harm 181 00:09:43,880 --> 00:09:46,720 Speaker 2: and attempted suicide. Four kids put in a hospital with 182 00:09:46,760 --> 00:09:50,079 Speaker 2: self harm, one stabbing himself. You know what's going to happen. 183 00:09:50,200 --> 00:09:52,760 Speaker 2: We all know what's going to happen. It's the Australian thing, 184 00:09:52,880 --> 00:09:55,079 Speaker 2: aboriginal death and custody, and it's going to be a 185 00:09:55,160 --> 00:09:57,000 Speaker 2: kid and then we're all going to go off our 186 00:09:57,040 --> 00:09:59,920 Speaker 2: head and you know, so we have to stop this. 187 00:10:00,080 --> 00:10:03,120 Speaker 2: That's what I just want the community to consider if 188 00:10:03,160 --> 00:10:06,040 Speaker 2: they want to live in a village that does this 189 00:10:06,160 --> 00:10:10,880 Speaker 2: to kids. Right now, alternatives fair enough don Dalely original 190 00:10:11,520 --> 00:10:15,360 Speaker 2: built in the nineties, purpose built facility sitting empty as 191 00:10:15,400 --> 00:10:18,280 Speaker 2: we speak, five hundred meters down the road from Behmah 192 00:10:18,480 --> 00:10:20,840 Speaker 2: that could have been revamped in about three months. It 193 00:10:20,840 --> 00:10:24,360 Speaker 2: has twenty four rooms. Twenty four rooms, that's at least half, 194 00:10:24,640 --> 00:10:29,360 Speaker 2: if not three quarters, of what they need. Rooms, classrooms, gymnasiums, 195 00:10:29,520 --> 00:10:33,360 Speaker 2: a purpose built facility. We need fully trained, best qualified, 196 00:10:33,840 --> 00:10:38,359 Speaker 2: gold standard youth workers that can build and develop relationships 197 00:10:38,360 --> 00:10:41,480 Speaker 2: so that this kid can reform. We know the jurisprudence 198 00:10:41,559 --> 00:10:44,680 Speaker 2: tells us that if anybody can be rehabilitated, it's children. 199 00:10:44,880 --> 00:10:47,880 Speaker 2: Forget adults. It's almost mission impossible with a lot of them. 200 00:10:48,120 --> 00:10:50,760 Speaker 2: But with kids that green Wood and they can be. 201 00:10:51,000 --> 00:10:54,280 Speaker 2: They want to be rehabilitated. They want protection, they want security, 202 00:10:54,440 --> 00:10:58,440 Speaker 2: they want love. They're coming from Guadalcanal, you know, that's 203 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:01,240 Speaker 2: the reality. That's what can be done. What should be 204 00:11:01,320 --> 00:11:03,320 Speaker 2: now and why we're saying it should be shut down 205 00:11:03,440 --> 00:11:07,880 Speaker 2: tomorrow is it's just morally reprehensible and we can't continue this. 206 00:11:08,080 --> 00:11:08,400 Speaker 3: John. 207 00:11:08,480 --> 00:11:11,080 Speaker 1: It doesn't sound as though the Minister is going to 208 00:11:11,120 --> 00:11:14,600 Speaker 1: change churchuon though, in terms of shutting it down. 209 00:11:14,760 --> 00:11:15,120 Speaker 2: Maybe. 210 00:11:15,760 --> 00:11:17,920 Speaker 3: So what can happen here? 211 00:11:18,760 --> 00:11:21,120 Speaker 2: The federal government can legislate. It can pass a law 212 00:11:21,679 --> 00:11:24,360 Speaker 2: in the Federal Parliament pursuing to Section one two to 213 00:11:24,520 --> 00:11:28,880 Speaker 2: the Austroaman Constitution, which gives it legislative power over a territory. 214 00:11:28,880 --> 00:11:31,080 Speaker 3: So you want the federal government to step in, definitely. 215 00:11:32,120 --> 00:11:35,720 Speaker 2: I want the Ukrainian government to step in and stop 216 00:11:35,760 --> 00:11:38,960 Speaker 2: what's happening in my village. That's how imporant it is. 217 00:11:39,720 --> 00:11:41,960 Speaker 2: So the federal government can pass a law, a bill 218 00:11:42,000 --> 00:11:43,960 Speaker 2: will be ten clauses. It doesn't have to be the 219 00:11:43,960 --> 00:11:46,360 Speaker 2: federal government. It could be the Greens. It could be 220 00:11:46,440 --> 00:11:50,600 Speaker 2: a private member's bill which says, as of now, detaining 221 00:11:50,679 --> 00:11:54,360 Speaker 2: kids in don Dale is unlawful, end of story. Watch them, 222 00:11:54,480 --> 00:11:57,720 Speaker 2: watch them make do watch them make it happen, and 223 00:11:57,800 --> 00:12:00,960 Speaker 2: that can happen. I'm campaigning for that right now. I'm 224 00:12:00,960 --> 00:12:03,560 Speaker 2: writing to the Prime Minister. We're rating to the Prime Minister. 225 00:12:03,559 --> 00:12:05,920 Speaker 2: We're writing to other federal members and we're going to 226 00:12:06,000 --> 00:12:06,720 Speaker 2: keep going on it. 227 00:12:07,240 --> 00:12:09,640 Speaker 1: And John, what do you say to you know, to 228 00:12:09,679 --> 00:12:11,800 Speaker 1: the people listening this morning who are going to be 229 00:12:11,840 --> 00:12:14,480 Speaker 1: really frustrated, they're actually you know, they're probably going to 230 00:12:14,520 --> 00:12:17,720 Speaker 1: be angry thinking to themselves. You know, I get John 231 00:12:17,760 --> 00:12:20,760 Speaker 1: off the radio. What he's saying is, you know, he's garbage. 232 00:12:20,840 --> 00:12:23,320 Speaker 1: There's kids that are broken into my home last week, 233 00:12:23,440 --> 00:12:26,920 Speaker 1: you know, and ransacked my home. I spoke to a bloke, 234 00:12:27,000 --> 00:12:29,920 Speaker 1: Chris out In driver who was in that very situation. 235 00:12:30,360 --> 00:12:31,640 Speaker 3: You know, what do you say to them? 236 00:12:32,120 --> 00:12:37,280 Speaker 2: Well, Luke, you know obviously, I mean I don't like this. 237 00:12:37,440 --> 00:12:40,240 Speaker 2: I don't want to sound like a complete tosser because 238 00:12:40,760 --> 00:12:42,680 Speaker 2: you know, I've been in the criminal system for thirty years. 239 00:12:42,679 --> 00:12:45,920 Speaker 2: I actually do understand the levels of frustration and anger. 240 00:12:46,160 --> 00:12:47,800 Speaker 2: And I mean, we've all been broken in there. We've 241 00:12:47,800 --> 00:12:50,240 Speaker 2: all had a castle enough, had it several times, and 242 00:12:50,280 --> 00:12:52,240 Speaker 2: I know how it feels. It feels crap and you 243 00:12:52,320 --> 00:12:56,120 Speaker 2: get angry. But can I just suggest this the reason 244 00:12:56,160 --> 00:12:59,400 Speaker 2: this is going on now is because of the failures 245 00:12:59,400 --> 00:13:01,800 Speaker 2: of the system up to this point, which includes what 246 00:13:01,840 --> 00:13:04,480 Speaker 2: we're doing right now. This is a harvest we are 247 00:13:04,559 --> 00:13:08,800 Speaker 2: reaping through our neglect. Don Dale four Corners happened seven 248 00:13:08,880 --> 00:13:12,280 Speaker 2: years ago, six years ago. Isn't it unbelievable that the 249 00:13:12,280 --> 00:13:15,440 Speaker 2: whole nation can go nuts over what we're doing in 250 00:13:15,559 --> 00:13:19,680 Speaker 2: juvenile justice space. We have a Royal commission that confirms it. 251 00:13:19,760 --> 00:13:23,120 Speaker 2: In more internationally, people are going on about this place, 252 00:13:23,440 --> 00:13:26,560 Speaker 2: and then six seven years later we're in exactly the 253 00:13:26,600 --> 00:13:30,079 Speaker 2: same position. How insane is that that could have been 254 00:13:30,080 --> 00:13:33,400 Speaker 2: fixed up seven years ago if they followed the recommendations 255 00:13:33,760 --> 00:13:37,800 Speaker 2: and started trying rehab, etc. So the people that are 256 00:13:37,800 --> 00:13:41,079 Speaker 2: breaking into houses now are in many respects a direct 257 00:13:41,120 --> 00:13:43,719 Speaker 2: consequence of our failure and our neglect to drial with 258 00:13:43,800 --> 00:13:44,440 Speaker 2: this properly. 259 00:13:45,160 --> 00:13:47,120 Speaker 3: So what do we have to do? Just be patient? 260 00:13:48,280 --> 00:13:51,400 Speaker 2: Well, patients? Patients is a virtue. Patience is a virtue. 261 00:13:51,480 --> 00:13:55,080 Speaker 1: Yes, it's really hard though, you know, stificing those issues 262 00:13:55,120 --> 00:13:57,120 Speaker 1: where they're just thinking to themselves, God. 263 00:13:56,960 --> 00:13:59,120 Speaker 3: What do we do? You know, how do we deal 264 00:13:59,120 --> 00:13:59,400 Speaker 3: with this? 265 00:14:00,080 --> 00:14:00,320 Speaker 1: Well? 266 00:14:00,440 --> 00:14:04,920 Speaker 2: How about using our intelligence? How about using patients? How 267 00:14:04,960 --> 00:14:08,040 Speaker 2: about even using a bit of compassion and understanding as 268 00:14:08,080 --> 00:14:10,520 Speaker 2: to where these kids are from? Because all the youth 269 00:14:10,679 --> 00:14:13,520 Speaker 2: justice judges say, look, kids aren't bad these kids are 270 00:14:13,559 --> 00:14:15,920 Speaker 2: doing bad things, but they're not actually bad. There's an 271 00:14:15,960 --> 00:14:19,840 Speaker 2: explanation for it. Let's try and think like that despite 272 00:14:19,880 --> 00:14:22,600 Speaker 2: the frustration and the anger, because if we vent our 273 00:14:22,720 --> 00:14:25,760 Speaker 2: spleen and we go the way the government have been 274 00:14:25,800 --> 00:14:29,080 Speaker 2: doing for years to acknowledge that and get our votes, 275 00:14:29,440 --> 00:14:31,960 Speaker 2: then we're just getting the same cycle. We're just getting 276 00:14:31,960 --> 00:14:36,240 Speaker 2: the same breakings, car thiefs, assaults. We need to change it, 277 00:14:36,280 --> 00:14:39,720 Speaker 2: we need to transform it fundamentally. And I know it's 278 00:14:39,760 --> 00:14:43,200 Speaker 2: difficult persuading a lot and probably the majority of the people, 279 00:14:43,280 --> 00:14:47,240 Speaker 2: but I don't care. I really don't care, because how 280 00:14:47,280 --> 00:14:51,560 Speaker 2: did you get the vote? Suffragettes? They were a tiny minority, 281 00:14:51,880 --> 00:14:54,160 Speaker 2: but what they did they knew was the right thing, 282 00:14:54,600 --> 00:14:57,040 Speaker 2: and they eventually won. Oh most women didn't even agree 283 00:14:57,080 --> 00:14:59,920 Speaker 2: with the Suffragettes. How did Gandhi get the British out 284 00:14:59,920 --> 00:15:03,360 Speaker 2: of India? He was in a minority, doctor Martin Luther King. 285 00:15:03,800 --> 00:15:08,640 Speaker 2: Progress is always achieved by people in a minority, initially 286 00:15:09,000 --> 00:15:12,480 Speaker 2: who push the envelope out, and that's what we're trying 287 00:15:12,480 --> 00:15:15,200 Speaker 2: to do here, trying to wake up Australia to its morals, 288 00:15:15,360 --> 00:15:17,080 Speaker 2: its ethics, its decencies. 289 00:15:17,480 --> 00:15:17,760 Speaker 3: John. 290 00:15:17,920 --> 00:15:19,880 Speaker 1: Unfortunately, we are going to have to leave it there. 291 00:15:20,160 --> 00:15:22,040 Speaker 1: We will catch up with you again soon. We are 292 00:15:22,120 --> 00:15:24,720 Speaker 1: hoping to organize a bit of a panel discussion over 293 00:15:25,000 --> 00:15:25,760 Speaker 1: the coming weeks. 294 00:15:25,880 --> 00:15:29,080 Speaker 3: Thank you so much for your time this John Lawrence. 295 00:15:29,040 --> 00:15:30,160 Speaker 2: Good lak for the rest of the day. 296 00:15:30,320 --> 00:15:30,960 Speaker 3: Thank you