
Photo: SMU
The Voice failed, but Victoria goes ahead anyway.
TREATY SIGNED
Australian-first treaty legislation has passed in Victoria’s parliament to applause and tears late on Thursday night, despite the country voting against a Voice to Parliament.
The Statewide Treaty Bill will now enshrine a “democratically elected body for First Peoples”, which will be the Gellung Warl Body. This group will be “consulted on laws and policies affecting Indigenous communities”.

After two days of debate, the upper house of Victoria’s parliament passed the statewide treaty bill without amendments by 21 votes to 16, just before 9pm on Thursday.

Premier Jacinta Allan said the bill would be signed by the Victorian government and First Peoples’ Assembly in the coming weeks.
“This treaty gives Aboriginal communities the power to shape the policies and services that affect their lives,” she said.
“This is how we build a fairer, stronger Victoria for everyone.”
So, what are the fine details associated with this legislation?
Firstly, Gellung Warl will now include two extra bodies to “hold the government to account” and to continue the “truth-telling work” of the Yoorrook Justice Commission.
The negotiated treaty will also require a formal apology from the state government to the First Peoples of Victoria, which will come at some point in the near future.
Victoria’s primary and secondary students will now be set to learn more about Victoria’s First Peoples, with a new curriculum using the findings of the Yoorrook Commission to be developed for prep to year 10 students.
Gellung Warl will also be “futureproofed with a special appropriation act” to be set up by parliament, receiving tens of millions of dollars per year once operational.
Just like that, as predicted, the states have taken matters into their own hands.
In 2023, Australians overwhelmingly rejected the establishment of a divisive Voice to Parliament advisory body for the federal government.
Divisive Voice campaign has been defeated
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However, despite the Australian public letting their own voices be heard, it was soon announced that states would push ahead with the vision anyway.
State governments will push ahead with Voice treaties anyway
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At the time, Rueben Berg, the Co-Chair of Victoria’s First Peoples’ Assembly, said the state was on track to begin treaty negotiations at the start of 2024.
Now, Victoria is the first state to formally finalise their plans almost two years later.
The legislation will now go to the Governor for royal assent, with the Victorian Liberals promising to scrap the Treaty within 100 days if they are elected to government.
The current government and their supporters say this is a ‘massive win’ for the state, but underneath the surface, we know they don’t actually care about indigenous Australians.
Everything is all a cultural marxist front for the real agenda lurking behind the scenes.
LAND GRAB CONCERNS
As was the concern with federal plans at the time of the Voice vote, a formal treaty leaves the door open to shadow front organisations ‘acting on behalf of Indigenous people’ to call for more land to be seized or restricted to suit the Agenda 2030 plan.
Agenda 2030: Australia’s Role in the United Nations
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For decades, government organisations have taken from the public purse that is meant to be set aside for Indigenous Australians, yet is put in the back pocket of executives.
Executives, that in most cases, are not Indigenous Australians themselves.
What will happen with the tens of millions of dollars in ‘appropriation payments’?
Will this improve literacy or living standards?
I doubt we will see anything actually improve, as is always the case.
The controversial ‘Yes’ campaign was filled mixed messages and hidden agendas from the start, signifying part of the centralised land takeover plan.
Discussion: The Great U.N. Land Grab
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When it was defeated, they used the spider web of government fakery to take it to the state levels, just as they did with the COVID ‘pandemic’.
Let’s not forget that Indigenous elder, Grandmother Mulara, appeared on the General Knowledge Podcast to warn of the hidden scam that was at work at the time.
The Voice to Parliament with Indigenous Elder Grandmother Mulara
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On the episode, it was warned that the corporate entity we call the ‘Australian Government’ wants the original people of this land to finally be recognised by the (fake) Australian Constitution to use them as a tool for a mass corporate land grab.
Documents: Is the Australian Government a Privately-Owned Company?
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The government wants to remove the sovereignty of the indigenous people and bring them under the control of the corporatocracy.
It’s a swindle. Plain and simple.
Now, Victoria is the first to fall for the scam, might like they have for many other issues.
The occupied state continues its decline into an unrecognisable rogue colony. Let’s hope all Australians, Indigenous especially included, fight back against this agenda before this type of legislation spreads to other states.

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Grandmother Mulara was right. I wonder if Geoff Clark, former head of the Warrnambool Aboriginal outfit, is involved? The SA Labor Govt (under “Mali”) even beat Victoria to a treaty, despite recording the second-highest “No” vote in The Voice referendum (64%; Qld topped it with 68%). They were so brazen and brimming with arrogance and hubris that they announced this within two weeks of the resounding No vote. The voting for members of the “SA Voice” was a shambles. One candidate won a place with just 20 votes, another resigned within a month or two, while several didn’t even bother to attend the first meeting.