Cultural sensitivity, education, the ads are one thing, but the ads are basically about male violence against women, per se. In Australia, when I visited there as minister, they had started that, because Australia is a very macho society that actually likes sport. Australian men are into sport—not aboriginal men necessarily, just men. So they have these ads, just as you say, with the big football stars and big rugby stars. All these guys are coming on the radio now and saying "I know you get mad, but don't go home and beat the woman" or whatever, the sheila. They're doing this kind of thing, which is just like this. You have to deal with your anger in a different way, other than beating up on women.
That's a generic thing. I'm talking about sensitivity towards the sense of who aboriginal people are. Earlier on, Nicole said that when she was young, in school, she got taught a history of aboriginal people that was based on the idea of aboriginal people being bad and that we had to kill them all to get where we wanted to go as colonials. There were cowboys and Indians. Indians were bad and cowboys were good—that kind of simplistic thing. I know we need to move beyond that. How do we do that? Is there something practical and tangible?
Sheila, you're the tangible lady here. Is there something practical and tangible you think we can do?