Words fail me ... but the VIC govt failed this little girl
In a shocking case of child neglect we can see that non-government care workers did more for this baby girl, than Victoria's Department of Human Services.
“A baby suffered serious electrical burns, witnessed repeated acts of domestic violence and lived in horrific conditions for 22 months before Victorian welfare authorities finally took her away from her drug-addicted mother.The mother is Aboriginal. I wonder whether Andrew Bolt is right about political correctness causing government-run departments to act more slowly than they should because of the desire to avoid the appearance of being heartless jackbooted racists - rather than just being heartless ribbon-wearing cowards. As Andrew says:
The state's Department of Human Services was first notified of concerns for the girl in March 2001, when the child was three months old.
Despite the mother's first child being removed from her care in 1999, the second child was not removed by the department until January 2003.
The full horror of the girl's first two years of life have been detailed in a judgment handed down by the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal.”
“Is it because she was Aboriginal? Is it because, as I’ve warned so often, that we leave Aboriginal children in grave danger that we would not tolerate for children of any other race because we are so terrified of the “stolen generations” myth?”Personally, I think the mother's racial background had less to do with the problem than her family history.
“When the mother was three, her older sister had been murdered. She was placed in foster care but suffered repeated sexual abuse there.I think the guilt felt for society's failure to protect her as a child, led the case workers to try and be lenient with her own failings as a parent - thus perpetuating the damage from one generation to another. We need more grace-based intervention to save these kids before they have their own children and pass on the horror, we need a robust idea of love as something that involves discipline, not some wishy-washy acceptance that it's everyone else's fault.
She lived on the street from the age of 14 and had convictions for theft and robbery from the age of 15. She also took heroin.”
Grace is a free gift of love, not license to do whatever you want. If you want to learn about grace, go study Christianity, have a robust conversation with your local priest, pastor or minister - or get Christian non-government organisations involved in caring for people - like the ones that made a difference here.
UPDATE: Added link to Andrew's post.
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