Another shining example of what happens when money talks and First Nations culture walks. Andrew Forrest is once again trying to bend the sacred Ashburton River in the Pilbara to his private gain, seeking to build a cluster of weirs and irrigation works along a stretch of water deemed spiritual country by the Buurabalayji Thalanyji Aboriginal Corporation.
This isn’t about “regional sustainability” or “closing the water-gap” as the gloss might suggest: the tribunal previously found that the primary beneficiary of the project would be Forrest’s own pastoral-and-mining interests, not the wider community. Meanwhile the Thalanyji people are forced into court-rooms fighting for respect of their heritage, forced to watch their river, their serpent spirit Warnamankura’s home, become fodder for corporate ambition.
This is a vivid illustration of how the wealthy and well-connected continue to appropriate land and culture for private enrichment—while Indigenous custodians bear the cost. If we are truly serious about justice, we should be calling out not just miners drilling into deserts but billionaires bending rivers and courts to suit their balance-sheet.

#australia #indigenousrights #environment #corporatepower #auspol #olygarchy #greed #Twiggy #pissofftwiggy #fuckofftwiggy
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-11-04/andrew-forrest-traditional-owners-in-sat-ashburton-river-plan/105966594

Andrew Forrest's plan to alter sacred Ashburton River under fresh legal scrutiny

Mining billionaire Andrew Forrest's controversial plan to alter the natural river system on his large outback WA cattle station is under renewed legal scrutiny.

ABC News

They say "nobody thinks of themselves as being the villains in their story".

But I find that hard to believe with all the moustache twirling, gloating, and mad cackling in the #olygarchy.

These people take great delight in causing pain and anguish and are incredibly proud about it.

Spotify Hosts Trump Inauguration Brunch and Makes $150,000 Donation to Ceremony

The company, which hosted Joe Rogan, Ben Shapiro, and others, called the event “business as usual”

Pitchfork