Yes. I guess I think there's a failure to understand the need for changes in attitudes and the function that an inquiry would provide, much in the way the Truth and Reconciliation Commission provided an immense amount of learning and changes in attitude. You can see it throughout the media.
Sometimes you see people writing in and saying that people want a royal commission. We are not talking about a royal commission. No one who's advocating has said “royal commission”, but a national inquiry, which would give the families a chance to talk. I think that if we watched coverage on the Tina Fontaine case this week, we saw clearly the problems with policing, and it comes down to attitudes.
I think that to shift those attitudes we really need to hear what people are going through, we really need to hear about the daily lives of women and the violence they live with, and we need to listen. The non-aboriginal community needs to witness, listen, and change their attitudes.