Miss Digby

52.6K posts

Miss Digby banner
Miss Digby

Miss Digby

@DigbyMiss

Albo is our PM ♥️Stage 4 sadly dogs alpacas ducks geese & devil cat apiarist ALP voter for life pensioner detest Lib/Nats NO DM’s AT ALL

Western Australia, Australia Katılım Ağustos 2018
1.6K Takip Edilen2.7K Takipçiler
Miss Digby
Miss Digby@DigbyMiss·
For all Di’s followers I am sad to tell you that Di succumbed to the cancer, she had been fighting for the last eight years, on Sunday 24th May. She died at home, as she wished, while sleeping and at peace. Cremation will be 3:30pm, Karakatta. Please inform attendance in comments
English
82
40
371
23K
Phillip Adams
Phillip Adams@PhillipAdams_1·
The cover of my final book was Wes Walter’s portrait that won the Archibald almost 50 years ago.
Phillip Adams tweet media
English
19
20
273
4.3K
Jacinta Nampijinpa
Jacinta Nampijinpa@JNampijinpa·
Australia cannot keep ignoring this. I spoke on Outsiders about the horrific reality facing Indigenous women and children — and why the truth must be told. We need accountability. We need action. And we need it now.
English
158
341
1.6K
21.4K
Miss Digby retweetledi
Pammieoz
Pammieoz@Pammieoz·
Gina’s Lap Dog …..
Pammieoz tweet media
English
211
743
2.3K
32.5K
NewspeakZB
NewspeakZB@NewspeakZB·
@_HenryBolton As a Commonwealth member, this is how proud I am of our "Head of State"
NewspeakZB tweet media
English
4
5
34
817
Henry Bolton OBE 🇬🇧
Henry Bolton OBE 🇬🇧@_HenryBolton·
There cannot be a Briton alive who was not proud of our King today. God Save The King!🇬🇧🤴
Henry Bolton OBE 🇬🇧 tweet media
English
5.4K
2.7K
30.1K
448.1K
Prue MacSween
Prue MacSween@macsween_prue·
Nationwide outrage & despair over the little murdered & defiled Aboriginal girl. Living in a slum town camp unfit for anyone. Billions spent to supposedly close the gap, which is widened by woke, blinkered, self-righteous fools. Babies left in dangerous third world environments, sacrificed over fear of stolen generation claims. Better to leave them in danger than fight for their future. This country is run by imbeciles who go to bed at night feeling so good about themselves. Meanwhile vulnerable people are left to live in hell. Is this the “fair” Australia you promise @AlboMP ?
English
107
241
1.2K
14.5K
Miss Digby retweetledi
jim axon
jim axon@jimaxon66·
Gina's simp.....
jim axon tweet media
Filipino
420
206
805
15.7K
Jacinta Nampijinpa
Jacinta Nampijinpa@JNampijinpa·
TRAGIC CASE HIGHLIGHTS A NATIONAL DISGRACE The death of five-year-old Sharon Granites has had a profound impact on families across the Northern Territory and beyond. Like many Australians, I am devastated by the news that she has been found dead, and my thoughts are with her family and loved ones. As more details emerge, the focus must remain on supporting Sharon’s family and the work of authorities. (The name Sharon Granites is used in this article to ensure she is not reduced to a statistic. When speaking of her, I will call her Kumanjayi Little Baby in appropriate cultural settings.) Alongside that grief sits a question that cannot be ignored. How did this happen? It is a question that demands honesty. For too long, there has been a reluctance to speak plainly about the conditions in and around town camps. In reality, too many have become environments where safety is not guaranteed, particularly for children. There is constant movement. People coming and going. Individuals with long criminal histories moving in and out. Alcohol restrictions that exist on paper but are not enforced in practice. Overcrowding. Poor maintenance. Limited oversight. These are not new observations. The town camp now at the centre of this case is one I know well. It is a place where I have lost family. A niece was stabbed to death there. Another child in my extended family was killed in an accident at the front of that same camp. There have been too many lives lost in that place alone. And yet, these conditions persist. We know from Closing the Gap data that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and children remain among the most vulnerable in the country. The Northern Territory continues to experience the highest domestic and family violence rates in the country. Approximately 100 women have been killed by intimate partners over the past 25 years. In 2024, seven of the nine homicide victims in the Territory were linked to domestic and family violence. These are not just statistics. They are indicators of risk. That risk too often goes unaddressed. Despite this, billions of dollars continue to flow through Indigenous organisations, land councils and local governance structures, yet the conditions on the ground tell a different story. The question is whether those outcomes are being delivered in practice. Where town camps remain unsafe and vulnerable people are exposed to harm, accountability is unavoidable. Pointing to funding levels is not enough. Nor is pointing to programs. What matters is that those investments are translating into safer lives. In too many cases, the answer is no. There has been a longstanding call for greater scrutiny. For an examination of how resources are allocated, how decisions are made, and whether those responsible for delivering outcomes are being held to account. I have raised these issues in Parliament. I have called for greater scrutiny of how funding is being used and for stronger action to protect vulnerable women and children. I have called for a broader inquiry into violence in our communities. This moment demands that they are not ignored any longer. An independent inquiry must now be on the table. Not only into the circumstances surrounding this case, but into the broader conditions that allow such vulnerability to persist. That includes the governance of town camps, the role of organisations responsible for their upkeep, and whether current laws and enforcement mechanisms are adequate to protect the most vulnerable. Because if they are not, they must change. Too often, difficult conversations are avoided. There is a reluctance to speak plainly about what is happening in some communities. Silence does not protect anyone, including women, children and families such as Sharon’s. We cannot continue to accept a situation where environments of known risk remain unchanged. Where warning signs are visible, but action is delayed. Where funding is substantial, but outcomes fall short. We have the resources. We have the knowledge. What is lacking is the willingness to insist on accountability and to follow through with meaningful reform. Sharon Granites is not a statistic. She is a little girl, part of a family, part of a community and part of this nation. Her death has forced a spotlight onto long-standing issues. The question now is whether we will respond to that reality. Not with rhetoric. Not with temporary measures. But with the seriousness it demands. Because until we do, the same question will continue to be asked. How did this happen? And why, when the risks were clear, did we allow them to remain?
Jacinta Nampijinpa tweet media
English
205
341
1.5K
39.3K
Ian Graves is Neurodetergent. Having a crack
WELL DONE ANGUS gives a press conference about the Royal Commission interim report about the events at Bondi. He states he’s not happy with it,but when pressed by a reporter about what he didn’t like he said he hadn’t read it yet. HA!😳😂😂Ian
English
74
346
1.3K
11.7K
Politic@l Spinner.
Politic@l Spinner.@lesstenny·
Complete cooker looney nutjob Is she almost like a female version of Donald Trump.? #auspol
Politic@l Spinner. tweet media
Brisbane, Queensland 🇦🇺 English
179
179
503
12.4K
@MysterySolvent
@MysterySolvent@MysterySolvents·
What do you call Melania’s fashion look for today?
@MysterySolvent tweet media
English
1.9K
67
324
51.5K
Tom the whistleblower
Tom the whistleblower@blowingtom2·
Look out! Linda’s about sue someone. We know how she gets when she’s angry.
Tom the whistleblower tweet media
English
79
49
340
8.3K
Dr Helen Fry | WWII Historian
Huge thanks to all my followers for your incredible support over the years. Your enthusiasm for my research and these new espionage stories means the world to me. I’m writing these books for you - to keep alive the legacy of our wartime heroes and to honour how they fought and sacrificed for the freedoms we enjoy today.
Dr Helen Fry | WWII Historian tweet media
English
14
40
392
3.4K