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Today's guest is Dr Anthony Dillon, a psychologist and an Indigenous academic and commentator and we're having a discussion that is a cross-section between mental health and culture. We chat about Anthony's current trends in mental health diagnoses, the potential drawbacks of labelling, victim mentaliity, and the significance of community and connection in mental wellbeing.In this episode:Anthony's journey into PsychologyGrowing up with Indigenous and English heritageCurrent mental health trends and diagnosesThe impact of labels in mental healthVictim mentality and its effectsThe importance of social connectionIdentity politics and division in societyThe Voice to Parliament debateCultural training in psychologyAdvice for young peopleConnect with Dr Anthony Dillon:WebsiteLinkedInFacebookConnect with Clare: Instagram YouTubeFacebook LinkedInWebsite More about On the Couch with Clare:Come take a seat On the Couch with Clare, your weekly dose of common sense and raw conversations, where psychology meets everyday life. It's a show aimed to bring scientific insights, engaging conversations and never shies away from the tough topics across health, relationships, politics, parenting and everyday life. You'll hear from guests from diverse backgrounds, including media personalities, authors, and health professionals. Expect a blend of professional wisdom, personal anecdotes and political correctness - free zone. Clare's straightforward and honest approach delivers shame-free practical solutions, new perspectives, and actionable advice. Keeping it real, she addresses everything from fitness struggles, ADHD and digital addictions to mental health challenges and the dating scene. So, whether you're sipping coffee or enjoying your favourite wine, prepare for your weekly meet-up with a friend who's here to show you that the only battle you're truly facing is with yourself—and it's a battle you can win.Clare Rowe is a dynamic Sydney-based psychologist with a Masters in Educational & Developmental Psychology. Heading up a leading Child & Adolescent Psychology clinic, Clare's career spans from the therapy room to the courtroom and the media spotlight, offering practical solutions for parents regaining confidence, individuals navigating life post-divorce, and anyone trying to balance the demands of a fast-paced world.Dropping every Thursday, "On the Couch with Clare" will unfold with season 1 launching in July 2024.
Join the eminent Daisy Cousens as she delves into the latest in culture, politics and business on ADH TV. Watch ‘The Daisy Cousens Show' Wednesdays 7PM AEST live on ADH TV. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
As we enter the Grand Finale Week of the Australian Aboriginal Voice Referendum my WilmsFront guest is Anthony Dillon to discuss where this campaign has taken the nation.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this interview, John sits down with his good friend Anthony Dillon, an Indigenous academic and commentator. Anthony's reflections on Indigenous affairs are particularly insightful as, in addition to his academic experience, he can offer the perspective of an Indigenous person who has both succeeded within modern Australia and is the son of Australia's first Indigenous police officer, Colin Dillon.
GUEST 1 OVERVIEW: Alan Jones, is one of Australia's most well-known and popular radio broadcasters. Jones was a former Wallabies coach who began his radio career in 1985 as a morning's host on Radio 2UE. He spent 16 years there, the majority as the network's breakfast presenter, before moving to 2GB in 2001. He was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 2005, for service to the community, to the media, and to sports administration. GUEST 2 OVERVIEW: Anthony is an honorary fellow at the Institute for Positive Psychology and Education at Australian Catholic University in Sydney. His research interests are positive psychology, conceptualization of mental health, wellbeing, and Aboriginal education. He is active as a social commentator on Aboriginal issues and is regularly asked for interviews and his opinion in the popular media. As a researcher, commentator, and practicing psychologist, he regularly provides guest lectures to psychology students at universities and other professional bodies on Aboriginal psychology. GUEST 3 OVERVIEW: Graham Wynn is founder and director of Superior People Recruitment. He is an employment expert and recruiter and has regular talkback radio spots nationally on Triple M and SouthernFM Community Radio, discussing all things around employment, careers, training and education. Graham has also been featured on Channel 7 and Channel 9 news. Graham's working career has been diverse and extensive; he is highly regarded in management consulting and financial roles ranging from travel, training, manufacturing and service-related companies.
Dr Anthony Dillon joins Dave Pellowe to discuss Gary Johns' speech at CPAC about what it will really take to close the gap, and how people can effectively help others to vote "no" to the referendum on the "Voice". • https://voice.gov.au/referendum-2023/referendum-question-and-constitutional-amendment • https://www.spectator.com.au/2023/08/vote-yes-for-cake-and-coke • https://GoldCoastChapel.org/comingup • https://AnthonyDillon.com.au • "Spirit Behind the Voice" https://LockePress.com/shop • "Black Rednecks" https://amzn.to/44foKsc • https://ChurchAndState.com.au/adelaide • https://DavePellowe.com
Taking up the call to fight for Western civilisation with flair, style, and incredible sass. Watch ‘Daisy Cousens' live and on demand at ADH TV, Wednesdays and Sundays 6pm AEST. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Aboriginal affairs commentator Anthony Dillon has added his name to a growing list of those concerned about the Voice.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Aboriginal affairs commentator Anthony Dillon has added his name to a growing list of those concerned about the Voice.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
---ARTICLES AND LINKS DISCUSSEDFollow Anthony Dillon on Twitter:@Anthonywodillon---Read Anthoy's Essays:https://www.anthonydillon.com.au---FOLLOW THE CONVERSATION ON reddit:https://www.reddit.com/r/thenewfleshpodcast/---SUPPORT THE NEW FLESHPatreon:https://www.patreon.com/user?u=61455803---Buy Me A Coffee:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thenewflesh---Instagram: @thenewfleshpodcast---Twitter: @TheNewFleshpod---Follow Ricky: @ricky_allpike on InstagramFollow Jon: @thejonastro on Instagram---Logo Design by Made To Move: @made.tomove on InstagramTheme Song: Dreamdrive "Chase Dreams"
Indigenous commentator Anthony Dillon returns to The Political Animals for a conversation about the mooted Indigenous voice to parliament and other aspects of the evolving culture around the place of Aboriginal people in contemporary Australia, including welcome to and acknowledgement of country, the idea of cultural safety, reconciliation, cancel culture in relation to Indigenous issues and the evolving language used to describe Aboriginal, now First Nations, Australians. Dr Anthony Dillon is an indigenous commentator and behavioural scientist and researcher at The Australian Catholic University. He blogs at www.anthonydillon.com.au and tweets at @Athonywodillon. You can read Anthony's article, discussed in the show, here. The Political Animals is hosted by Dr Jonathan Cole, an academic, writer, speaker and translator specialising in political theology: the intersection of religion and politics. Jonathan was a senior terrorism analyst at Australian intelligence agency the Office of National Assessments where he worked on Islamist terrorism and the global jihadist movement. You can follow Jonathan and the show on Facebook and Twitter.
Dr Anthony Dillon, a researcher of Indigenous health and wellbeing, talks to Luke Grant about the Uluru Statement of the Heart, recently prioritised by the newly appointed Albanese government. Listen to the full interview here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
---ARTICLES AND LINKS DISCUSSEDFollow Anthony on Twitter:@Anthonywodillon---Anthony Dillon - official website:anthonydillon.com.au---SUPPORT THE NEW FLESHPatreon:https://www.patreon.com/user?u=61455803---Buy Me A Coffee:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/thenewflesh---THE NEW FLESH WEEKLY - Spotify playlist:https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5hDT5Et08Kepl3dClOiHxf?si=8d2845265f494fc4---Instagram: @thenewfleshpodcast---Twitter: @TheNewFleshpod---Follow Ricky: @ricky_allpike on InstagramFollow Jon: @thejonastro on InstagramFollow AJ: @_aj_1985 on Instagram---Logo Design by Made To Move: @made.tomove on InstagramTheme Song: Dreamdrive "Chase Dreams"
Anthony Dillon is a powerful voice for Australia's forgotten indigenous people, those without the privileged platform occupied by the educated, urban elite. In this Watercooler conversation with Nick Cater, he argues that ill-founded attacks on Australia are holding us back from true reconciliation. Rather than focus on our differences, our goal must be to rediscover the common core of humanity that all Australians share. This is the first of a two-part Watercooler conversation to mark Australia Day 2022. Nick Cater is Executive Director of the Menzies Research Centre. Email Nick at watercooler@menziesrc.org Support these podcasts by becoming a financial subscriber from just $10 a month: menziesrc.org/subscriptions Anthony Dillon is an academic and Indigenous commentator who is not afraid to take issue with the current popular ideologies which portray Indigenous people merely as victims of white Australia and history (the invasion). His experience in the area of Indigenous Health and well being has demonstrated that these dogmatically held beliefs are killing more indigenous people than cigarettes. He strongly believe that the only way we will “Close the Gap” between Indigenous Australians and the rest of the population is by ensuring that Indigenous people have access to the opportunities that most Australians take for granted. To achieve this requires us all to focus on the commonalities between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, and abandon the myth that Indigenous Australians are deeply culturally different from other Australians. He believes it is extremely important that there is an open dialogue on the issues which have remained hidden under a veil of silence for too long, such as violence and substance abuse. He is regularly quoted in the popular media as a commentator on Indigenous affairs as my point of view is logical, academically sound and not constrained by preconceived notions of victimhood, or limited by political correctness. Anthony's linkedin page: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anthony-dillon-3065a816/?originalSubdomain=au
Indigenous commentator Anthony Dillon joins the show for a discussion about indigenous affairs. Anthony provides a fresh perspective that is critical of what he calls "blacktivism," the grievance industry and the view that Australia is a racist country. Issues covered in the conversation include poverty, child abuse, incarceration, Aboriginal deaths in custody, indigenous incarceration rates, the infamous Bill Leak cartoon, Bruce Pascoe's Dark Emu and the fraught issue of Aboriginal identity. Dr Anthony Dillon is an indigenous commentator and behavioural scientist and researcher at The Australian Catholic University. Check out his website: www.anthonydillon.com.au. Host of The Political Animals, Jonathan Cole, is an academic, writer, speaker and translator who specialises in political theology: the intersection of religion and politics. He is currently Assistant Director of the Centre for Public and Contextual Theology at Charles Sturt University. Previously, he worked as a Senior Terrorism Analyst at Australian intelligence agency The Office of National Assessments. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter and Facebook.
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On the show this Wednesday, we welcome CIS contributor and Australian Catholic University academic, Dr Anthony Dillon. Writing in The Herald Sun recently, Anthony says proponents for truth-telling of Australia's past selectively advance a sanitised version and are disinterested in inconvenient truths facing Indigenous Australians today. Anthony argues that truth-telling hasn't extended to sensitive contemporary issues, such as the tragic rates of child abuse, violence, and suicide inflicting Indigenous communities. Instead, he warns that a loud minority seek to silence debate and distract from persistent and pervasive dysfunction faced by marginalised Australians. He cites the confected outrage generated against the late cartoonist, Bill Leak, empty charges of racism hurled where none is found to exist, and the harmful groupthink that has swallowed false narratives about Australia's Indigenous history. Join us, when guest host, Glenn Fahey asks how we can promote genuine truth-telling on Indigenous affairs? Does political correctness and cancel culture silence genuine truth-tellers? How can Australia purport to be a free and open society when civil debate is unwelcome? Can evidence trump emotion in tackling policy challenges facing Indigenous Australians? Is there cause for optimism following the recent rebuke of false claims about Indigenous histories?
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I spoke to academic and Indigenous affairs commentator Dr Anthony Dillon about Aboriginal youth suicide, solutions to problems, and how the Woke Left is pulling Aboriginal Australians down, not up. Video interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYAK-9BDBMc&feature=youtu.be
Reports consumer confidence has hit a 12-year-high, Business Editor Ross Greenwood joins the show. Plus, Dr Anthony Dillon explains why he supports a push to raise the age of criminal responsibility from 10 to 12 under a new proposal. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Aboriginal Affairs, welfare, and justice in modern Australia has gone from a carefully considered public policy issue to another toxic aspect of the culture war with knee-jerk responses mixed with harmful identity politics. On the first weekly Thursday WilmsFront we attempt to introduce some rationality into this issue with guest Dr Anthony Dillon. Contact: Email: me@timwilms.com Message: https://t.me/timwilms Wilms Front Links: Entropy: https://entropystream.live/app/wilmsfront Website: http://timwilms.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/wilmsfront Minds: https://www.minds.com/timwilms Gab: https://gab.com/timwilms Telegram: https://t.me/wilmsfront Parler: https://parler.com/profile/timwilms/ Support the Show: Membership: http://www.theunshackled.net/membership Donate: https://www.theunshackled.net/donate/ Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/TheUnshackled Other Unshackled Productions: Trad Tasman Talk: https://www.theunshackled.net/ttt/ Report From Tiger Mountain: http://reportfromtigermountain.com/ Other Unshackled Links: Website: https://www.theunshackled.net Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TUnshackled Twitter: https://twitter.com/Un_shackled Gab: https://gab.ai/theunshackled Telegram: https://t.me/theunshackled Minds: https://www.minds.com/The_Unshackled MeWe: https://mewe.com/p/theunshackled Music and Graphics by James Fox Higgins Voice Over by Morgan Munro See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
As we near the 30th anniversary of the release of the Royal Commission into Black Deaths in Custody, the Breakdown looks at how the activists use deaths to promote their agenda that Australia is racist - and ignore a much bigger issue.And why the response to the death of Prince Philip makes me proud to be a monarchist.
Join the Good Sauce team live as we discuss #AustraliaDay plus all the latest headlines & important public issues with right thinking you'll never see on the ABC. Special guest, academic Anthony Dillon joins us during the show. #notQandA #AusPol WATCH here: https://goodsauce.news/not-qa-with-dr-anthony-dillon-28-january-2021/
Why are black people who are successful, conservative or just don't toe the line called “race traitors”? • WATCH: https://GoodSauce.news/truth-talking-001/ • Hosted by Warren Mundine, Truth Talking is live streamed to Facebook & YouTube where viewers can join the conversation with real time comments and questions as the panel discusses the important issues. • In this episode… A new documentary by Larry Elder, Uncle Tom, is a collection of interviews with some of America's most provocative black conservative thinkers – those who are called “Uncle Toms”. • The message behind the Uncle Tom narrative is that successful or conservative black people have gone above their station, disowned their identity and become white. It's a dangerous narrative – because it only makes sense if you believe white people are superior. The bigotry comes with various labels including “Uncle Tom” and “coconut” (brown on the outside and white on the inside). • Hear from four of Australia's “Kings and Queens of Coconut Island”, Warren Mundine, Jacinta Price, Anthony Dillon & Josephine Cashman; four Aboriginal Australians who've experienced the Uncle Tom slur first hand. They will talk about their experiences and their reaction to Larry Elder's documentary, Uncle Tom, and how it relates to the Australian experience.
Dr Anthony Dillon
It's #NotQandA! Join the conversation with your comments and questions LIVE as we discuss the issues that just won't go away: Covid-19 restrictions (if we feel like it), and Aboriginal deaths in (& not in) custody; including your #live questions & comments. Panelists include University lecturer & Indigenous issues commentator Dr Anthony Dillon, Alice Springs Councillor & CIS Indigenous Research Director Jacinta Price, CPAC Australia Director Andrew Cooper, and writer & Pastor Mark Powell; & host, Dave Pellowe. On Twitter: @AnthonyWODillon | @JNampijinpa | @MarkPowell0728
Name calling in pubic seems to have become a part of discourse on indigenous matters. Some people are called 'coconuts' and ' Uncle Tom's' when they raise what are issues that are just as relevant to the discussion of the welfare of Indigenous people and their communities that might fall outside the immediate focus of advocacy or protests. Anthony Dillon is a lecturer at the Australian Catholic University and he has copped some vitriol on Twitter and elsewhere for raising issues related to violence committed by Indigenous people against other indigenous people in order to broaden the discussion currently being had in the aftermath of the George Floyd killing in the United States. Can we have a civil debate on social media and elsewhere? Anthony Dillon explores this issue and more. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today Coach Dillon explains what NFHS plans are for graduation, spending time with his family, his playing career at JSU, the June 1st start date, and so much more.
Changing the Debate; Our expert panel comprised of CIS's Indigenous Program director, Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, Nyunggai Warren Mundine AO, Dr Anthony Dillon and Chris Kenny of Sky News joined us at the Centre for Independent Studies for a conversation on how best to change the debate surrounding indigenous issues. When the nation debates whether we should change the date of Australia Day, we should ask; How is any of this going to improve the lives of Indigenous Australians in practical terms? How is this going to generate economic development and employment opportunities, reduce rates of domestic violence, reduce rates of incarceration, produce better health outcomes or help Indigenous Australians empower themselves away from the victim mentality? Will the “Voice” help or hinder indigenous prosperity? In recent years, symbolic acts and gestures have distracted and deferred attention from the real issues that Indigenous Australians face. However, since the 1970s, governments and NGOs have been motivated by good intentions to overcome Indigenous disadvantage. Yet the billions of tax dollars spent have not appeared to close any measurable gap. Check out Jacinta's recent article from January 22, 2020 in The Australian: https://www.cis.org.au/commentary/articles/culture-to-blame-for-much-of-indigenous-family-violence/ Subscribe to the CIS Newsletter: https://www.cis.org.au/subscribe/ Follow the CIS on: http://www.cis.org.au Twitter: https://twitter.com/CISOZ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CentreIndependentStudies LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-centre-for-independent-studies/ For all of the CIS research on Indigenous Affairs click here: https://www.cis.org.au/research/indigenous-affairs/
Australians want to celebrate Australia Day on January 26. We talk to the IPA's Dr Bella d'Abrera about the results of the IPA-commissioned poll on attitudes towards Australia Day and how Russell Coight inspires her (0:00-7:27). Heroes and Villains this week include Laurence Fox's awesome Question Time appearance in the UK, the nurse who saved Greg the Yellow Wiggle, Deloitte and the man who called the police and shamed a Target employee to 200,000 people over an electric toothbrush. Dr Anthony Dillon joins the show to talk about appearing in the IPA's Race Has No Place video, what he thinks of #changethedate and what the real issues affecting Indigenous Australians are (17:15-33:50). After that, we have one of the most impressive performances in the history of the quiz (33:50-41:50), before James and Pete break down the New York Times endorsing not one but two women for the Presidency, Extinction Rebellion being listed as a terrorist group and Pete makes an impassioned plea for his struggling local cricket team to be included in #sportsrorts.
Join our full lineup of panellists Jacinta Price, Peter Fitzsimons, Anthony Dillon, Geoffrey Winters, Norma Ingram & Jeremy Sammut for a debate on Australia Day. Calls are growing to move Australia Day away from January 26. But is having the national day on the anniversary of the First Fleet's arrival in 1788 really insensitive to Indigenous people? How would changing the date help the plight of Aboriginal Australians? And if we change Australia Day, what date should we choose? ____________________ The Centre for Independent Studies (CIS) promotes free choice and individual liberty, and defends cultural freedom and the open exchange of ideas. CIS encourages debate among leading academics, politicians, media and the public. We aim to make sure good policy ideas are heard and seriously considered so that Australia can continue to prosper into the future. Check out the CIS at - https://www.cis.org.au/ Subscribe to CIS mailing list- https://www.cis.org.au/subscribe/ Support us with a tax-deductible donation at - https://www.cis.org.au/support/ Join the CIS as a member at - https://www.cis.org.au/join-cis/ Follow CIS on Socials Twitter - https://twitter.com/CISOZ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/CentreIndependentStudies/ Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-centre-for-independent-studies/?viewAsMember=true